Saturday, June 21, 2014

A Mirror for Every Corner of Your House

This is something to consider as we look at who we were, are, and will be. It seems we are constantly trying to discover who we are throughout all of our lives with the things we think we can't seem to live without. 

In this opening article of the current edition of the magazine "The MockingBird" editor Ethan Richardson describes our penchant desire to find out true self's. He brings into question how we think we discover our identities and more importantly in the end the cost.   


A Mirror for Every Corner of Your House

After moving out of my old place this spring, I was horrified to find just how much garbage I had piled up in a small number of years. In dusty corners of the house, small reminders of who I thought I might like to be: musical instruments I never learned to play; a Rosetta Stone Portuguese program I never even uploaded; philosophy books on the shelf I thought I needed (and never once opened); a Ziggy Stardust wig and leather tights. I don’t know which is more embarrassing: the money lost on all these endeavors, or the naïveté that made each of these endeavors feel so ultimate. Craigslist helped me remove them from my life. All except the wig.

The funny thing? I am currently doing it all over again. Each piece of my new house is a new self, and ten years later, I’ll happen upon a shirt (a self?) I’d never wear again if you paid me. Maybe the same is true for you.

In developmental psychology this phenomenon is called the End-of-History Illusion. It is our tendency to believe, contrary to past evidence, that who we are now is who we will continue to be forever. Jordi Quoidbach, in his study on the illusion, describes it this way:

People have a fundamental misconception about their future selves… people may believe that who they are today is pretty much who they will be tomorrow, despite the fact that it isn’t who they were yesterday… people expect to change little in the future, despite knowing that they have changed a lot in the past, and that this tendency bedevils their decision-making.

It seems Rod Stewart and The Faces only had it half-right. Sure, “I wish that I knew what I know now / when I was younger,” but I also “wish that I could know now what I will know then.”

We tend not to think this way, though. We rarely think, when buying a pair of shoes, “Will I hate these shoes in a couple years?” Who can tell how we’re going to feel, anyway? And this is not just true for the stuff in our closets, but for the persons who wear them, too. We have an inbuilt sense of omniscience when it comes to our lives. We tend to believe that this self now—or the self we are envisioning—is the Final Self, the one that won’t need discarding, changing, or hiding, like all the rough drafts did before.

It comes as no surprise to us when we see someone else’s Final Self come crashing down. In Hollywood, we actually crave it. As the hate-worship saga continues upon the life of Gwyneth Paltrow, the biggest surprise about her split with Coldplay frontman Chris Martin wasn’t that it felt so curated (she called it “conscious uncoupling”), but that it felt so good to finally justify the disdain. We judge from the couch, She just isn’t who she thinks she is.

So, who are you now? What Final Self is writing the story as you read this? What elements of you will continue to be you when you awake tomorrow? Next month? In ten years? And what will be gone?

The Catholic writer Henri Nouwen talks about the experience of losing, painfully, all remnants of his Final Self. As a celebrated theologian working in an upper-echelon institution, he left the world of his accomplishments to begin working at a center for the mentally and physically disabled. Here’s how he describes the experience:

This experience was and, in many ways, is still the most important experience of my new life, because it forced me to rediscover my true identity. These broken, wounded, and completely unpretentious people forced me to let go of my relevant self—the self that can do things, show things, prove things, build things—and forced me to reclaim that unadorned self in which I am completely vulnerable, open to receive and give love regardless of any accomplishments.

Notice how this “unadorned self” Nouwen describes is devoid of any talk of potential or possibility. All the detritus left of the project of a Final Self is wiped clean and, in its absence, the real self emerges. This seems to make sense of John the Baptist’s poignant surrender at the arrival of Christ: “He must increase, but I must decrease” (Jn 3.30). Maybe there’s something to this unadorned self. Maybe this is the point at which we really do find the “end-of-history” solution, where none of our varied stories of ourselves—past, present, or future—come to matter nearly as much as the one given us in our weakness.

This issue of The Mockingbird is the Identity Issue. In it we cover the various ways in which we try to answer the question, “Who am I?” You will read about benchwarming ballplayers, sell-out hipsters, and the greatest ladder-climbing trickster of them all, Jacob, son of Isaac. You will crunch the numbers within the authenticity economy. You will look at the hashtag obsession known as FOMO (fear of missing out), especially through the work of psychoanalyst Adam Phillips. There are essays on Pete Townshend and The Who, and on the HBO sensation, True Detective.

So here’s your glimpse into the mirror, and to the hope that stands beyond it. We hope you enjoy.

Ethan Richardson

Editor

Monday, June 2, 2014

Entertainment Evangelism



I'm on the Rev. Dr. Brian K. Gigee, Lead Pastor, New Life Lutheran Church, Pearland, TX. e-mail list. Brian is a colleague, fellow Lutheran, and friend. In his latest e-mail to the congregation he serves was a piece on "Entertainment Evangelism" I found interesting. Brian serves in what is considered the "bible belt" and in the shadows of several "mega churches" and yet he serves and works along side of the congregation in one of the ELCA's growing faith communities. 

So... while you may or may not like the term "Entertainment Evangelism" Brian has a different take on it... and one that makes sense to me as well. 

Let me know what you think. 

"I was talking with someone about being a mainline Lutheran church and how we compared to the TV evangelism churches... the reference was about "Entertainment Evangelism"... chime in as you care to... some like it and some don't... and me?... I don't care... and here's why...

Help me carve the word 'en-ter-tain-ment' out... like this...

En = go in

ter = land (territory, terrarium, terra)

tain = hold (the fountain holds the font.)

ment= the state of or practice of... like 'government' = the practice of
governing, etc...

Do people really come to church to be entertained?  Maybe.  I think mostly not.  But, people do expect something to happen in worship.  Something like a change of heart, change of thought, a sense of being renewed... gaining a good perspective on all that's not right with ourselves... I have lots of ways to be entertained... and yet, I do expect God to show up on every Sunday to bless us, feed us and empower us, etc... and sometimes it's joyful... like Christmas and Easter and sometimes it's quieter and more introspective... like Ash Wednesday and All Saint's Sunday... Memorial Day can be like that, too... a quieter time of worship to reflect on those who
have paid a price so you can come to worship this Sunday and I can write about it here...

So, let me put Jesus in the middle of this... as the purveyor of 'entertainment'.... as in Jesus entered our land... entered our world... entered our lives... and holds us... that's what 'en-ter-tain-ment' literally is, right?  Jesus coming to us with the 'font' ... the fountain for our sake...

But, we can't leave it at that...  WE should be entertaining to the world, too!  It is good and right, we say, in all times and in all places... that we should go out to enter the world... our neighborhoods, our workplaces, our homes, our kitchens, our bedrooms and hold on to others...  But I suppose we've got to get out of the church building to do that... and we do... that's why we gather each Sunday... this one being no different!"



He is also now an author... "God Works" you can find it on Amazon for Kindle @ $9.99
http://www.amazon.com/God-Works-Brian-K-Gigee-ebook/dp/B00HFUXFXC  









Monday, May 5, 2014

We're on a Mission from God... Part 1

May 4, 2014                                                       
Neh. 8:1-3, Acts 2:14,36-41, Luke 4:14-21

I pose a question… Is Cana Lutheran on a Mission from God? 
Or Is Cana Lutheran on a mission for herself?

We are going to be reflecting on what Cana’s mission might be over the next 5 weeks as we prepare to ready ourselves to call a new pastoral leader. This will be an interactive opportunity for you to add some voice to what your next leader may look like… more about this later.

 Let’s begin with Prayer

The terms Mission & Vision have been buzz words for the church for the last 20- 30 years.
So…What is your mission or vision?.... You need a vision and mission… Many ask, What is Mission?  What is Vision? Yeah… So What!

Many understand mission work in the church to mean… to go to another country and convert people. That’s what has often been referred to as the “Mission Field.” According to Gallup… that’s what most Christians believe when asked what it means to be in mission or a missionary. The same Gallup poll also points out that the US no longer sends out the most missionaries into the world. The poll also says that other religious traditions in other countries believe the richest mission field is the US, and they are sending missionaries here… most are Christian missionaries from Africa. Most Americans think the mission field is in Africa.

The BIG BIG questions are…
            What is your Mission?             What do you think it should be?
            Should you even have one?  If you do… Why is it important?

For many congregations their mission has been to bring people into the church. Back in the day the church was the place where God was… the place you learned about God. With this understanding it was an easy mission to fulfill because people were immigrating to this country and depending on your ethnic background you went to a corresponding church.
If you were German, Scandinavian, or Dannish… you went to a Lutheran Church
o    Polish, Italian, French, Irish, Hispanic you were most likely R C
o    English… Anglican or Methodist… Scottish… Presbyterian… Dutch… Reformed
It was easy to fill the churches mission… they just came. It’s what you did… the church was the center of society & culture. Today for better or worse this is not the case… in fact, it hasn’t been the case since the 1960’s... and participation has been dropping ever since.

Today you have to be intentional about connecting with people, and therein lays the problem for us. In the past they came… religious life was part of society… it was what you did, even if you didn’t believe… Today it isn’t the case, and because we never had to connect with others… unless we wanted too… we don’t really know how. And we still revert back to this understanding all the time. This happens at nearly every meeting I attend with you when the questions revolves around how we do things…  How can we get people to come here.

In the OT… Nehemiah… was the prophet who lead the Israelites back to Jerusalem after the Babylonian capture… and found in Neh. 8:1-3 was their  Mission from God… that the people were to read from the Law of Moses. Their mission was to be grounded in the scriptures… So they did that. Our Acts reading the Mission for Peter was to Preach, Baptize, and invoke the Holy Spirit. Our gospel reading from Luke, Jesus’ Mission was to tell the Good News to the Poor, announce Freedom for the Prisoners, give sight to the Blind, and Free those who Suffer. If you noticed, from our reading in the OT to Luke, the same scenario as ours has happened. The mission was to read from the Torah… the Law of Moses… if you noticed that’s the church… they were in the church. In Acts… they start to go out… Peter preaches outside of the church. While Jesus started in the temple ie church… but Jesus doesn’t stay there, he goes out… and says nothing about being in the church or being a church.

So… Why is this Important?

It’s important because God is a God who Moves
Warren Schulz of the Albin Institute says, “We have most often looked at God as a “Noun”. But, God is a God who moves. God is really a “Verb” God does things, God gives vision, God acts.”

To say this bluntly with grace… if your waiting for people to come here… we may be waiting for a long time. My friends… Jesus may have been in the building at one time…though I doubt it… but today and in the future… Jesus has left the building. Jesus and God are on the move, and they are active whether you’re with them or not. God desires us to walk with him… to act with him…You see… our God doesn’t sit still… God desires us to be active with him, and thus… I believe there is an expectation for us to act alongside of God… In other words, God expects us to leave the building sharing good news because it….

It Matters to God
It matters because God loves and forgives all of us… John 3:16… God so loved the world he sent his son Jesus to make that love known. God loves the whole world and God wants us to do our part in our little section of it. God desires us to live into his vision of engaging the our part of the world. You see… our Vision and Mission is not our doing, but God’s If it’s up to us… our agendas, our interests we will not go far, but with God everything is possible… HOW… How can God move us? The Holy Spirit my friends… we’ve been talking a bit about the Holy Spirit lately. You see the Holy Spirit empowers us to be hands and feet serving not our mission & purpose, but God’s mission & purpose.

In our Acts passage we see this being done. Peter, filled with the Holy Spirit preaches repentance and grace… God acts, and 3000 believed and were baptized… 3000 lives were transformed and changed that day. With the Holy Spirit among us God transforms us into Belonging… into Becoming… and into Believing people of faith sharing the good news.

The mission of God is important because God acted intentionally to come to us in human form to share a message of Love, Grace, and Forgiveness and we need to share that with others.              "The Entrepreneurial Church” Pr. Dennis Meyette

I emphasize the words WE NEED to go out and share… and it’s not only in the Warming Center or Crop Walk, or in collecting money… Those things are good and we need to do those… but it needs to be in all that we do… and my friends… I believe you can…and will… Sharing the good news needs to be intentional and it needs to be in building relationships with others. Sharing life and faith with people we meet. Sharing how the transforming, life giving love of Jesus in our lives. That’s how Cana Lutheran will impact the community.  

Closing:
Over the next 4 weeks we will have an opportunity to share our thoughts on what God is calling Cana Lutheran to be about. 
     What is God purpose at Cana?...What are your mission priorities?.. 
     The type of Pastoral Leader… and areas of ministry focus.
My hope is that we will start this discernment now, continue the conversation on June 15 with our last congregational event, and continue as your top goal with your new pastor to complete within a couple of years.

Close with story… I shared this before, but it bares repeating..

In a modern parable, the story is told of a community of people who lived on a stretch of dangerous seacoast where shipwrecks often occurred. Eventually, some of the townspeople decided to put some time and effort and money into a rescue operation. A small life-saving station was built and the devoted members of the rescue team kept an ongoing watch over the sea, ready to use their little boat to search for survivors in case of a shipwreck. As the result of this volunteer operation, the town became famous because of the many lives that were saved.

More and more people joined and became part of the team. Soon a new building was erected. It was much larger than the first little building and it was beautifully furnished and decorated. And as more and more amenities were added for the members' pleasure and comfort, the new building was slowly transformed into a kind of clubhouse. As a result, some of the members began to lose interest in the rescue operation.

But then a shipwreck occurred and many survivors were rescued and brought into the clubhouse for first aid. During the period of the operation which lasted for several days, the frenzied activity caused the attractive "clubhouse" to be considerably marred by such things as bloodstains on the lush carpeting.

At the next meeting there was a split in the membership. Most members felt that the life-saving operation was a hindrance to the social life of the organization. Those who disagreed were told that they could build another little station further down the coast. And, as the years went by, history continued to repeat itself.

Today, so the story goes, that seacoast has a number of exclusive clubhouses dotting the shore - but no one in the area seems to be concerned with rescue operations.


Monday, April 28, 2014

Really Thomas!

April 27, 2014                                                    
John 20:19-312

There’s a story of a boy asking questions of a Sunday School teacher who said it was wrong to ask questions and have doubts about God. So he asked yet another question: “Is God afraid of my questions and doubts?” He came to realize that God’s not afraid but his teacher sure was. 

Prayer

Many of us have been told in various ways that if we have doubts, or ask questions, or are skeptical of our faith or God that somehow we have sinned and have no faith… just like in the story I just shared. Somewhere along the way we’ve been discouraged or out-right told not to ask questions about God out of fear that we might be judged at not having faith.

Our gospel story today is a story is one of those places where we’ve gotten the idea that it is a bad thing to doubt. Doubting Thomas has been given a bad rap and perpetrated this notion that Doubt = No Faith. Just think about it for a moment… how could Thomas have doubted in Jesus? He was with Jesus for 3 years. He had a personal connection with Jesus as one of Jesus’ closest friends. Thomas… how could you? How could you not believe in Jesus!

You see John singles out Thomas… and I don’t know why. The other Gospels have the entire lot of Jesus disciples doubting and unbelieving. But for John…there seems to be a reason to single him out… for Thomas to doubt, and it makes it easy for us to say, “Really Thomas!” Of course… we should really be saying “Really” to all of Jesus’ friends… well… all but one… John! John was there till the end.

The truth of the matter is… most of us do doubt and most of us do have questions and many people have often felt belittled by some in the church by acknowledging those doubts, and asking questions. And… if I can be really honest… there are many times when I, as pastor, have questioned, doubted, and even encroaching non-belief at various times in my life. That’s right… me the pastor. Alright… I know… the pastor is suppose to have all the answers. After-all I went to seminary and studied all this stuff. Well… Yes I’ve studied… and yes I’ve still have questions… and doubts.

Even right now… I struggled all week with what God wants me to say to you about this story because I’m the pastor and you’re expecting me to have something to say that can shed light into your life. But, like Thomas it’s hard to believe without seeing. How can we know if Jesus is alive? Have you seen him? You have to admit… that Jesus being alive… it is really hard to believe! It seems like there are more questions than answers.

But as I looked at this story each day last week Two things came to mind in this story that seem important. At least as I looked at it.
1.     The Holy Spirit… Vs 21 Jesus says, “I am sending you just as the Father sent me.” Then he breathed on them and said, “Receive the Holy Spirit.”

2.     Seeing… Vs. 29 Jesus says, “Do you have faith in me because you see me?”

There is something about this story when Jesus talks about the Holy Spirit. Jesus does quite often in John. In fact… in John 16:8 it takes up most of the chapter. The spirit will come and show you the truth… the Holy Spirit will help you and guide you… the Holy Spirit will help you see… Interesting connection… Holy Spirit and Seeing!

Martin Luther thought of the Holy Spirit as the one who enlightens understanding. For Luther… Faith in Christ through The Holy Spirit = Seeing the living Christ. Said another way… Faith seeking understanding.  

A good example of our collective doubt was at the spring congregational meeting… when the talk was about the call process… When that happened you could see the anxiety level rise. It seemed that your understanding was being skewed because of the past couple of times when you went through this. It seemed your anxiety came with how the synod would give you names of pastors. After-all according to your understanding the last two pastors were “Bad,” “Worse,” and “Worse Yet” and  you weren’t going to get screwed again. It seems some of you… maybe most of you doubted the process would be different. That’s when
Hal raised his hand and calmly stood up and said, “Do we trust God?”

Perhaps, this was a Holy Spirit moment. Though… I’m sure there is still some anxiety.

One thing to keep in mind… John is writing for a community of faith some 60 – 70 years after Jesus had died, and that, like Thomas, had never seen the resurrected Christ. Sure, they had the testimony of others like who is presumed to be the writer of this gospel, but they hadn’t seen him for themselves. And so perhaps here, right near the close of the Gospel, Jesus doesn’t so much rebuke Thomas as he does bless all those who read this story and come to faith through it. Nevertheless… it still leads to more questions and even more doubts about how we as community live out without seeing.

All of this leads me to question:
-       What is it that would prompt a similar confession of faith from us today?
o    How might we say, “My Lord and My God” as a response to experiencing Jesus?
-       Do we look for a loving and accepting community of believers who also question?
o    Can we live with one another when we question?
-       Can we live as a community despite the questions and doubt, maybe even unbelief?
-       Do we seek someone or something to hold on to us when we struggle in faith or life?
-       Or do we just need to hear John’s acknowledgment that faith is hard and receive Jesus’ invitation to faith and promise of blessing?

I don’t know… I don’t have the answers….


However… I hope we can live into the questions as faithfully as we can.






Tuesday, April 22, 2014

Easter Sunday... "The Day Grace Came"

April 20, 2014                                             
Matt. 28:1-10

STORY: “There’s a story of a little boy who was not happy about going to church on Easter Sunday. His shoes were too tight, his tie pinched his neck, and the weather was way too nice to be cooped up inside a church…. As he sulked in the back seat of the car, his parents heard him mutter; “I don’t know why we have to go to church on Easter anyway, they keep telling the same old story and it always comes out the same in the end.”

Prayer:

-       Mike is a recovering alcoholic and would often go into the worship space to pray and ask God to forgive him. He once told me that he wonders if God could ever forgive him.

-       Joann struggled at believing she was worth anything as a person… she was abused by her father as a child and as I listened to her she contemplates suicide. She wonders how God could love someone like her.

-       Chuck has a degenerative eye disease and has become blind. He struggles to find self-worth. He says, “How can I live and work when I can’t even see? One day he ran into another person and fell. The other person noticing he was blind yelled at him saying, “you’re a worthless ________ and you shouldn’t be out by your-self.

-       A woman is angry that her young husband dies and leaves her alone. She is angry with doctors for not doing more and accused them of making mistakes. She asks God why he let this happen. God why would you do this to me? Why do you hate me?

-       Paul is a convicted felon… he’s in prison serving 20 years for aggravated assault, criminal sexual assault, home invasion to name a few of the charges. He wants to change his life, but anger issues always seem to get him in trouble. He often ends up in segregated confinement. He has discovered God, but often struggles to please God, but keeps making the same mistakes. He often yells out to God… why can’t I stop doing these things? God why can’t you help me? God can’t forgive me!

-       Peter was standing by a fire pit and people were coming up to him asking if he belonged this guy named Jesus. Peter denied it over and over. Peter believed he didn’t deserve forgiveness because what he did was unforgivable.

In all these stories we hear of struggle and doubt. Peter, Thomas… in fact all of Jesus’ friends struggled with the resurrection… struggled with forgiveness. We struggle with how God dispenses his forgiveness and grace. All of us have had regrettable experiences… all of us are broken and yet in our life stories, there are stories of hope… you see… it’s really not about us or them… But about Jesus’ love for us.

In all of these stories these people experienced God’s love and forgiveness and with God’s help are walking a path of redemption and resurrection. It doesn’t mean everything has been made better… Joann & Mike still struggle… Paul still is in prison. Yet… God is present with them and with us.

You see… It’s what Jesus did on Friday that TAKES the unforgiveable and MAKES it forgivable. On Friday forgiveness came and today Easter Sunday we celebrate that Grace and Love are possible…. Forgiveness is possible.

Today is Easter and “You Are Loved”
I saw the movie “Heaven is Real” the other day. I won’t give too much away in the event you haven’t seen it. The movie is about a 4 year old boy who gets an opportunity to experience heaven. As the movie goes the boy is in surgery for a burst appendix and is not doing well. He doesn’t die… so it’s not a near death experience, but he gets to see heaven and Jesus and some others. He tells his dad… a pastor… about this experience. And the dad struggles to understand as do others who learn about the little boy’s experience. In the end… what I got from the story was… Heaven is real… God is real… but, more to the point, the story is about love & grace through the struggles of the characters.  


In our Easter story today the same is true for the struggles of Jesus’ friends. Again it’s a story of Love & Grace. In the resurrection of Jesus… God has come and love is made possible. Today is Easter and love is present. It’s found here in the bread & wine… in the warm embrace of a friend… in the comforting words of encouragement. It’s Easter and you are loved in an inconceivable, irrevocable, and uncanny way by a God who created you so that you might love. It’s Easter and we are infected with the possibility of love… we are capable of love… we have the capacity to love… and a pervasive desire to love and be loved. It might not be at the forefront of our psyche… It may not appear to be a driving force in our lives… But I’m here to tell you… IT IS THERE!!! Love and Forgiveness and Grace is there! And it’s available!! It’s Easter and you are forgiven and made to love… and my friends… whether or not you believe it… You are good at it! 

This is the message today… Easter Sunday… It’s Easter and you are loved and you are forgiven because Today is the Day that GRACE Came.






Friday, April 18, 2014

Series: Making Change... Change of Focus

Palm Sunday
April 13, 2014                                                         Matt. 26:17-30

This Lenten season we’ve been reflecting on “Making Change”… not just the physical or outward change of doing things differently… but about Making Change here…. In our hearts. By making heart change… we assure ourselves that the other kinds of change will fall into place.

There’s a story of a company attempting to start a new pension plan, which required 100% participation. Every employee signed up except one. No amount of argument or persuasion could get this person to change his mind. Finally, the president of the company called the man into his office. He told the man, “Here is a copy of the proposed pension plan and here is a pen. Sign up or you're fired.” The man immediately picked up the pen and signed his name. The president of the company then said, “I don't understand why you refused to sign until now. What was your problem?” The man replied, “You're the first person who explained it to me clearly.” 
Is this how you make change?
So… how have you been doing at making heart change?

If your struggling to make change in your life… perhaps you need a…“Change of Focus”

Prayer:

Today is Palm Sunday in the season of Lent…. It means a couple of things…
              1. That the conclusion of Lent is near. It also means that we get to celebrate the joyous
                   & triumphant entrance of Jesus into Jerusalem. For many… Palm Sunday is about
                   Joy & Excitement & Anticipation.
              2. And it’s the last week of Jesus’ life. Even though… his friends still haven’t figured it
                  out. For Jesus’ friends… they’re thinking Jesus is finally going to do something                             about the Roman occupation. That Jesus is somehow going to bring justice for the 
                  Jews. Well… we know that’s not exactly what happens. And…while some celebrate
                  Jesus as the coming King of the Jews… others not so much.

It seems things are changing… and for Jesus it’s a change in focus. For Jesus… his focus now becomes more intentional towards God, his father. While some will paint Jesus’ entry into Jerusalem as a justice/political move… I believe the message Jesus brings is one of focus on faith & belief in God…. Not political nor justice. Not that Jesus didn’t speak about such things… but now, Jesus is demonstrating the big picture of God’s vision, and I believe it is one of Faith & Belief.

By the time we get to Palm Sunday and the 4 days that follow we see Jesus’ focus doing just that… demonstrating the big picture. Jesus cleanses the Temple… Curses the fig tree… the fig tree is symbolic of the nation. Challenges the Pharisee’s… talks about heaven & life in the future. Talks about the most important commandment. Chastises the Pharisee’s… these are the religious leaders… pastors. Weeps for Jerusalem and her people. Talks of the Temple crumbling to the ground. And final judgment.

From today, Palm Sunday, it’s 5 action packed chapters of 4 days in the life of Jesus… 4 days of Jesus trying to change the focus towards God. For me… the significance of Palm Sunday comes on day 5 when Jesus gathers his friends for a final meal of which finally to some extent does change the focus of his friends. And… this gathering can change our focus in 3 ways when we see Jesus as…

The Real Presence of God.
The gospels, especially Luke, feature Jesus taking part in a lot of meals. Whether Jesus is visiting Mary & Martha, Zachaeus, Peters mother-in-law, feeding the 5000… Jesus eats pretty well. It seems when Jesus is present with people… so is a lot of food. So… it seems fitting that Jesus would gather his friends for a final meal. And not only as a practical matter, but also as a sign or sacramental matter too.

When Jesus invites whether it’s the 5000, Mary & Martha, his friends, or others he takes the bread, blesses it, breaks it, and give it to his friends as an act of hospitality… and if you think about it… it’s the in-breaking of God into our lives. Jesus… after his resurrection walks the Emmaus Rd with 2 believers and they don’t recognize him… it’s only after they share bread that their eyes are opened… (Luke 24:28-34) So… for us as people of faith… sacramentally… the bread from which we share is Jesus as the real presence of God.

The second way we can have a change of focus is when we see Jesus as…
Sign and Sacrifice
When Jesus takes the cup of wine he’s changing the focus of the Jewish blood covenant of animal sacrifice for the forgiveness of sins. In the cup of wine, Jesus uses the wine as a sign of His blood sacrifice for the forgiveness of sins. Just as the bread is a sign of God’s hospitality… the wine is the sign of Jesus’ sacrifice on our behalf for our sin. So… when Jesus says, “Take and Eat” and “Take and Drink” he does two things…
1.     It’s a new agreement or covenant with God. No longer do people have to have a yearly animal blood sacrifice. Jesus does this once for all.
2.     Jesus is now the sacrifice that forgives sins for all people. There’s no need to make offerings & overtures for sins to be forgiven.

Which leads to the 3rd way we can have a change of focus… Jesus as…
Grace & Forgiveness
In this last meal… Judas is present. We’re pretty harsh with Judas as we see him as the villain in the story. Perhaps… rightfully so… but he’s present with Jesus. If we believe the bread & wine that Jesus offers all his friends is an invitation to grace & forgiveness… Well… Judas was there for that. However you understand what Judas did or have placed judgment upon him it’s really not for us to judge. We might be surprised in heaven on who’s there and who’s not.

Theologian Greg Carey states… “Preachers can help congregations grapple with the relationship between grace and judgment. Matthew never explains what Jesus means when he pronounces woe upon his betrayer: is Judas doomed because of God’s judgment or simply because of the path he has chosen? Nevertheless, popular imagination cannot hold grace and judgment together. Jesus Christ does: judgment often bears grace; grace always tempers judgment. Though judged, Judas eats with the other disciples nonetheless.”

Jesus feeds his betrayer… remember the Pharisee’s question… “Why do you eat with tax collectors & sinners?” I believe it’s because the story of Jesus is God’s story of Grace & Forgiveness. And… I believe it’s the Change of Focus Jesus desires us to make in this Lenten season. It’s the change of focus the church needs to make as well.

Closing:
Today we celebrate Jesus joyous entry into our lives and we celebrate in the means of grace of a holy meal of bread and wine. It’s the means by which we sinners… all of us… have the opportunity to receive grace & forgiveness when we share in Holy Communion. If we are looking to change the focus of our lives… today is a great day to do so. It will help us make the heart change we desire and help us make change in our lives.




 

Thursday, April 3, 2014

Making Change... Change of Heart



March 30, 2014                                                   
John 9:1-17

We’ve been talking about “Making Change” in our lives and in our community. This series is not so much about the physical or outward change we’re doing as much as it is about “Heart Change”. And… with heart change… the outward change becomes apparent and sustainable. Thus far… we’ve reflected on “Change of Season”… “Change of Habit”… last week… “Change of Circumstances”… and today…  “Change of Heart”

Prayer…

In our story today… and it’s a much larger story than we’ve read is about Jesus giving sight to a blind man... Of which he… the blind man… his parents, Jesus’ friends, and probably others think, the blind man or his parents have sinned. The context of this story is that Jesus is on the run. In the previous chapter Jesus is talking with some Jews and most likely Pharisee’s about Abraham and then makes the statement in Vs 58 that gets him almost killed.

Jesus says, “I tell you for certain that even before Abraham was, I was, and I AM.” then the people try to stone him and he ran off.”

So… here we find Jesus on the run and likely not in the mood to heal anyone as he is trying to get away. Yet… as they see this blind beggar along the road, his friends ask the question… “Teacher… why was this man born blind? Was it because he or his parents sinned?” As I mentioned… Jesus is on the run and not particularly interested in helping this guy… Yet… feels compelled to say and do something as I think he looks over his shoulder to see whose around… then says, “no neither sinned.”

I know it sounds strange to say Jesus isn’t interested in helping someone. But Jesus didn’t help everyone he encountered. Jesus didn’t physically heal everyone he saw. But in this story… Jesus has a change of heart and gives sight to this blind man. And… with this change of heart, Jesus changed every part of this man’s life.

If we look at this story closely… we would see it has nothing to do with whether or not this man or his parents sinned. But… that this is a story of a perceived problem this man has. Vs 8… this man’s neighbors know him and his problem all too well. You see…this blind man from birth is nothing more than a mooch… a beggar… a vagrant… thus he’s stigmatized because he’s unclean. According to Jewish society… he’s less than a person and rather easy to dismiss. I wonder how many times do you think about people like this and dismiss the beggars standing on some busy intersection holding a sign wanting money?

You see… it’s easy for us to look at others with their problems and say… she’s an alcoholic… he’s a drug addict… the kid with his pants half off as a drop out… she’s depressed… etc. All of these scenarios are for the other… But we often do this to ourselves as well. We often see ourselves as dropouts… disappointments… failures. We often see ourselves as problems, which limit us… and when invited to seek change, we often sabotage ourselves out of fear. This happens to us as the church as well. However… most of us have learned to cope with our limitations.

I remember years ago when life wasn’t so pleasant… I saw myself as a big loser with a BIG L on my forehead. Nothing was working… my life seemed doomed, then an invitation to look more closely to Jesus came. I chose to walk that path… more to the point… the Holy Spirit pushed me… to make a deeper commitment to following Jesus.

Then a strange thing happened… the people I hung out with saw it differently. I had had a change of heart. I no longer found the need to do the deviant things I was doing and no need to associate with the people I was associating with. I found acknowledging Jesus not only changed my heart and my life… but that acknowledging Jesus was simply too much for the people I was hanging out with.

The blind man in our story has a similar response, but from the Pharisee’s. Jesus illustrates this in a response from Mark’s gospel when he says, “The people honor me with their lips, but their hearts are far from me.”

When Jesus invites a change of heart in our lives… life will change. We might need a big push…but life will change when our heart changes.

Now a WARNING… just because we have a change of heart, and Jesus comes into our lives… doesn’t mean life is going to be all hunky-dorie and great. There will still be struggle and challenges. I continue to be challenged in my faith walk. Wednesday evening Hannah shared that she struggles with faith and guess what… Hannah is only 16… Well Hannah… I’m 58 and I’m struggling at times too. Mr. Terry is 69 and he struggles… and Mr. Leo is 96… Mr. Leo do you struggle? YES!!!

And sometimes… I wonder if my change of heart is even worth it, even with the promises Jesus makes about having new life. You see… change is always a risk. However, I can tell you… and I suppose some of you out there can as well…even though there are challenges and doubts of faith at times… I can tell you… it’s worth it to continue the journey… because you do get life assuring glimpses of the new and abundant life Jesus offers.

For the man born blind that Jesus helps Vs 35-38 of the larger story are key despite the disruption of his life. These verses point to where change of heart really happens for the man and for us.

When Jesus heard what had happened, he went and found the man. Then Jesus asked, “Do you have faith in the Son of Man?” He replied, “Sir, if you will tell me who he is, I will put my faith in him.”  “You have already seen him,” Jesus answered, “and right now he is talking with you.” The man said, “Lord, I put my faith in you!” Then he worshiped Jesus. (John 9: 35-38 CEV)

For me my friends… this is the grace and love of God.
For me… this is where the blind man has the ultimate change of heart.
For me…. This is where God is revealed in Jesus and we too are able to “SEE” and make change in our lives. And indeed… have a Change of Heart.