Tuesday, April 29, 2014

the whole body and blood thing

Exodus 12:21-28
Mark 14:12-25


There has been so much emphasis in the last thirty years or so on making church 'more palatable' and less churchy. We have stripped the robes off the priests, stripped the pulpits away from the front of the sanctuary, even taken out candles and offering plates, and sometimes even crosses. All in an attempt to make church somewhere people want to be. And, honestly, for the life of me I can't figure out why. If people want to do something that isn't church why would they come to church to do that?

I read a book a while back called Bad Religion and it set me off on a course of thinking about church and why we do or don't do what we do in this place we call our sanctuary.  Not too much later I heard a story about a group of teens who said they didn't want to go to church where everything feels like their everyday life, they liked their church because it's weird.  I loved the thought of that. They like ti because it's weird.

So, this month, we are going to look at Keeping Church Weird. A look at the weird stuff do we do in this sanctuary space of ours and why we do it, where it started, and why it might be important after all.

This week we look at the sacrament of Holy Communion. To a total outsider looking in this whole imagery of "this is my body" and "this is my blood given to you" is a little more than weird. Why does Jesus, at the last supper with the disciples, decide to take the bread and call it his broken body? Why does he take the cup of wine and say it is his blood, the blood of the new covenant? What relevance do those terms have to the faith of those gathered in the Upper Room and what relevance do they still have today?  What is it about that event that is so significant that it has carried over into the life of every Christian congregation since as one of their most important sacraments of the faith?

It dates back to a time when animal sacrifice, the spilling of the blood of a lamb, was a normal part of a worship service. You brought in an animal and sacrificed it as a burnt offering to the Lord. It continues in the institution of the Passover ritual, a time established by Moses to set aside for remembering the time when the Israelites were spared by God and allowed to leave their slavery in Egypt and head for a land promised to them by God.

But why does body and blood matter? Why do we clean it up and not call it body and blood in our progressive churches? And is there a difference in what we mean today when we talk about the sacrament of Holy Communion and what it might have meant in the years shortly after Jesus' death and resurrection?

Join us this month as we educate ourselves a little on why we are who we are and how we might just want to 'keep church weird' after all.

Thoughts? Comments? Email me or comment below.

Tuesday, April 15, 2014

"Don't Hold on to Me"

John 20:1-18

They said to her, "Woman, why are you weeping?" She said to them, "They have taken away my Lord, and I do not know where they have laid him."


Mary is beyond distress. Not only has her beloved Jesus been crucified, but now his body has been stolen from the tomb. She is terrorized. But this is only the beginning of a roller coaster ride of epic proportions, as the next verses indicate.

When she had said this, she turned around and saw Jesus standing there, but she did not know that it was Jesus. Jesus said to her, "Woman, why are you weeping? Whom are you looking for?" 

Supposing him to be the gardener, she said to him, "Sir, if you have carried him away, tell me where you have laid him, and I will take him away."

Jesus said to her, "Mary!" 
She turned and said to him in Hebrew, "Rabbouni!" (which means Teacher).

Jesus said to her, "Do not hold on to me, because I have not yet ascended to the Father. But go to my brothers and say to them, 'I am ascending to my Father and your Father, to my God and your God.'"

What a moment of shock and awe it must have been for Mary when Jesus calls her by name after his resurrection.  She utters "Teacher!" but must have been a mixture of terrified, thrilled and panicked shock.
And so immediately, he senses her wanting to cling to him. To hold him close since she thought he was gone forever. And he tells her no.  "Do not hold onto me because I have not yet ascended to the Father." This state of affairs, this moment with Jesus is temporary and fleeting. Don't hold too tightly to this moment because it will not last forever.

This is the moment where Resurrection theology can be most clearly seen at work. Jesus is risen indeed, but he demands that his loved ones not hold onto the bodily form they see before them. It isn't about Jesus the man anymore, it's about God's love overcoming even the sting of death. It's about what people will do now that they have looked that powerful love right in the eye. It's about how to live with Jesus the Christ as a part of your own being. Not as a man you invite to dinner, but as a savior who lives and reigns in your daily life.

This is the moment that Jesus shows us that resurrection is not a body being risen from a tomb. Resurrection is releasing what we held onto before. Resurrection is looking at the same scene in a whole new way. Resurrection is knowing that the tomb will likely enclose us again at some point, but God's love alive in our hearts has the power to roll away the stone that traps us in the tomb.  Resurrection is a way of life, not a moment in time. 

What do we hold onto because it feels safer than looking at things a whole new way?  Why do we resist resurrection and favor clinging to the past instead? Email me or comment below.

PS: Don't forget to attend our Good Friday service and cantata this Friday evening at 7 pm. Beautiful communion and choral rendition of the last week of Jesus.  You don't want to miss it!   Also remember our Easter Brunch potluck and Easter Egg Hunt for the children right after the 9:30 worship service on Sunday!  




Tuesday, April 8, 2014

"Ceremonial Stuff"

Matthew 21:1-11

After a big parade or a ceremony of some kind or any sort of gathering of the masses there's always the stuff that's left behind.  What do we make of that stuff and the importance (or lack thereof) it has for people who leave it behind?

The disciples went and did as Jesus had directed them; they brought the donkey and the colt, and put their cloaks on them, and he sat on them. A very large crowd spread their cloaks on the road, and others cut branches from the trees and spread them on the road.

The parade in Jerusalem that we read about at the beginning of this week's service is an amazing spectacle. Disciples running to get a donkey AND a colt. And cloaks. They put cloaks on the donkey and the colt.

At the parade site,  people spread yet more cloaks on the road. Others cut branches from the trees and spread them on the road.  I am thinking that long past our gospel writers' renderings of these passages, there must have been the stuff of ceremonial events, like this parade, lying in its wake.

Palm branches left on the street. Perhaps even cloaks still lying there. People caught up in the moment of Jesus' entry and the loud "Hosanna" of the crowd could certainly forget their cloaks.

One time, after my son Jake's performance as Nicky in Avenue Q last year, I left my coat at the theatre. I didn't even notice for a couple of days, and by the time I did, the coat was gone forever.  Not in the lost and found. Just gone. Perhaps taken by someone who needed a coat, perhaps taken by someone who needed to steal, who knows, but I never got it back. In the coat pocket was a ticket stub I also kept there to a Broadway performance of "In the Heights" my favorite Broadway musical. I kept it there because it would be a fun reminder to me of my family's experience seeing that show on Broadway and the excitement of that evening. It was kind of my 'it's a bad day and this will cheer me up' pocket companion. Also gone in the chaos of me leaving my coat behind.

We do leave stuff, even important stuff, lying behind when we get caught up with the ceremonies of life and with the drumbeat of the crowd.  When Jesus enters Jerusalem that day, few people realized he was headed toward his death by the end of the week. Not even the disciples who had been repeatedly told by Jesus of this destiny.  The crowd was just caught up in the cheers and the passion of the moment. So they put palm branches and coats on the road and joined the fray. And, because we know the rest of the story, we know the excitement surrounding Jesus' triumphal entry into Jerusalem did not last, did not sustain itself, but turned into a mass mob fleeing the scene and leaving Jesus nearly alone, except for his mother and a few faithful women.  Another example, I might add, of mass mentality. Leave and hide because everyone else did.  Yell "crucify" because everyone else is.

When we leave things like umbrellas at weddings or funerals, or coats in theatres, or dishes after a potluck, it is because we are forgetful, yes. It is also because we fail to recognize that all of what is going on around us is important, not just the rush of the crowd or the excitement of the reason we came. The scene all around Jesus in this last week of his earthly existence is filled with big moments and small everyday moments.  This Easter lets focus on them all. The big biblical renderings and the small, seemingly insignificant details about who brought coats and who left their trash lying in the street when it was all over.

Would a CSI agent be able to come to the scene of Jesus' death and find our bread wrappers there? Our coats and handbags? Would they be at the foot of the cross or would they be strewn about in a field clearly determining that we got the heck out of town as soon as the road got dark and dangerous?

Where do you want evidence of you to be found this Easter?  Email me or comment below.


Tuesday, April 1, 2014

"Dusty Attic Days"

Ezekiel 37:1-14
John 11:1-45

Those who have been plodding along through the Old Testament with me in Disciple Bible Study have gotten used to the darkness and despair the Israelites faced in their journey to the Promised Land and then later as they moved into exile after being overtaken by the Assyrians in the North and the Babylonians in the South.  The people were living in a time in which they were not certain they could ever again feel joyful and hopeful.

And yet in this 37th chapter of Ezekiel, we receive the words that Israel will be restored.
"Mortal, these bones are the whole house of Israel. They say, 'Our bones are dried up, and our hope is lost; we are cut off completely.' Therefore prophesy, and say to them, Thus says the Lord GOD: I am going to open your graves, and bring you up from your graves, O my people; and I will bring you back to the land of Israel.
And you shall know that I am the LORD, when I open your graves, and bring you up from your graves, O my people.  I will put my spirit within you, and you shall live, and I will place you on your own soil; then you shall know that I, the LORD, have spoken and will act," says the LORD.

We also have in the gospel account by John an amazing recounting of Lazarus being resurrected from the dead.
When he had said this, he cried with a loud voice, "Lazarus, come out!" The dead man came out, his hands and feet bound with strips of cloth, and his face wrapped in a cloth. Jesus said to them, "Unbind him, and let him go." Many of the Jews therefore, who had come with Mary and had seen what Jesus did, believed in him.

What do we make of these miraculous events? What is their message for us today?  Perhaps it is important that we take stock of what it means to believe completely in the word of God.  It is important to take a deep breath and understand that God can breathe resurrection life into any part of our lives we consider beyond saving.  Perhaps we can't raise our loved ones from the tomb in the miraculous way Jesus does with his beloved friend Lazarus. Perhaps we can't go into a field of bones and make them come alive again, but we can breathe new life into old ways of being.

This week is one week until Palm Sunday when Jesus rides triumphantly into Jerusalem on the donkey, praised and lauded and celebrated, just days before he ends up hanging on a cross mocked and spat upon.  Life is full of strange twists and turns. Life is full of vibrancy one minute and then stopped dead in its tracks the next. We can never be sure what will kill our dreams and what will save them.

This Sunday, as we read about Ezekiel's Valley of Dry Bones and Lazarus' resurrection from the dead, perhaps we should reflect on what we have let die in our own faith journey. What have we let fizzle out, burn out, blow out that God might love resurrecting?  Holy Communion will be a wonderful part of this reflective time on Sunday.  What better way to renew and revive and perhaps resurrect in a new way the old faith we once knew and loved?  Bring with you to the table of grace the childlike love of God and faith in the goodness of the world that you once had.  Ask Jesus in the holy meal to breathe new life into your fading faith. Ask Jesus to help you walk with him down the road to the cross. Ask Jesus to nail your darkness to the cross and to help you raise yourself up into a new creation for God's kingdom on Easter this year.

This week we celebrate the dusty old things we have in our attics, basements, or crawl spaces. Find something you once loved that is hanging out gathering dust and bring it in to our altar space.  May these items collecting dust, but suddenly displayed once again remind us of our own dust-collecting hearts that need a dose of God's grace and perhaps a little nudge to get us moving into being God's people once again.

Thoughts? Email me or comment below.