John 1:1-14
This Sunday we will have our first annual Impromptu Intergenerational Interactive Christmas Pageant. Wish I could tell you for sure what will happen, but I'm not sure how it will unfold. Which, in my estimation, makes it just about as perfect as you can imagine a Nativity being. I can't wait!
On Christmas Eve, we finish our sermon series on The Gospel According to George Bailey, the theological insights in It's A Wonderful Life. This week's sermon blog below focuses on the Christmas Eve sermon, "Every Time A Bell Rings, An Angel Gets His Wings."
What George Bailey discovers in his journey with Clarence, Angel Second Class, is that life can be wonderful even if it is not what we planned. He also discovers that every person's life affects everyone else's life... even people we will never know are touched somehow by our moving about on this planet with them.
John 1 reminds us that the Light of Christ has been with us from the beginning. That in him was life and "the life was the light of all people." That "the light shines in darkness, and the darkness did not overcome it."
Our lives are the light. The light of Christ shines in our hearts and in our souls and it is our duty and responsibility as people of Christ to release that light from within and let it shine on a world in darkness.
Clarence tells George that he will help him see that his life is worth living and that George, in turn, will help him get his wings. Clarence will earn his wings by helping a lost soul that has gone terribly dark return to a joyous Christmas light. And, in the last scene, when George sees all the pieces of his wonderful life shining around him in his living room, he gets it. He knows his soul will no longer be dark and that the light he shines on the world matters.
Bells rang out across our land on Friday in memory of the victims of the shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary. Each of those bells represents a life lost, but also must represent a light that will continue to glow throughout the ages. We can never get back, in physical form, those who pass on, but we can see to it that their light shines throughout the ages.
We do this by making a difference in big and small ways each day. We do this by understanding what the Christmas Season of Peace is all about. We do this by letting the Love of Christ pour out of our souls and into the world.
... to all who received him, who believed in his name, he gave power to become children of God, who were born, not of blood or of the will of the flesh or of the will of man, but of God. And the Word became flesh and lived among us, and we have seen his glory, the glory as of a father's only son, full of grace and truth.
How can you shine your light not only on Christmas, but every day? What lights have shined for you in times of darkness? Email me or comment below. Merry Christmas.
Tuesday, December 18, 2012
Tuesday, December 11, 2012
I Don't Care What Happens to Me.... I Wanna Live Again
Luke 1:39-55
George Bailey finally gets a chance to see, through the magic of the second-class angel Clarence, what his life would have been like if he had never lived. And he realizes that his Place on Earth is special, beautiful, wonderful. The money is still missing, jail time may still be ahead of him, but he doesn't want to lose another second of the life God gave him. So he stands on that same bridge where he almost took his own life and he says, "I don't care what happens to me.... I wanna live again."
Mary has been entrusted to carrying to term the Savior, the Christ Child. She could have run from this. She could have said, "Thanks, but no thanks." She had a choice. But she says, "My soul magnifies the Lord." She says, "My spirit rejoices..." She says, "(God) has looked with favor on the lowliness of his servant." She understands that from now on, because of the choices she has made to face the road ahead, generations will call her blessed.
Knowing that something is happening in life that will forever affect your future is ominous and exciting. It is perilous and spectacular. The unknowns can paralyze you or they can make you soar.
Mary had no real knowledge of how things would turn out for her once she began the journey of becoming the mother of Jesus. She just knew that she couldn't care what would happen, she needed to live into that reality, that promise from God that she would be blessed... regardless.
George faces an uncertain future and yet he is able to run through the streets with joy saying, "Merry Christmas" to all the parts of Bedford Falls that were, before his realization, more of a burden than a joy.
How do we move into an unknown future, an advent of expectation, with a calm reassurance that God will "look with favor" on our lives, no matter what lies ahead? How do we begin to really LIVE again, despite not knowing what will happen to us tomorrow?
Email me or comment below.
George Bailey finally gets a chance to see, through the magic of the second-class angel Clarence, what his life would have been like if he had never lived. And he realizes that his Place on Earth is special, beautiful, wonderful. The money is still missing, jail time may still be ahead of him, but he doesn't want to lose another second of the life God gave him. So he stands on that same bridge where he almost took his own life and he says, "I don't care what happens to me.... I wanna live again."
Mary has been entrusted to carrying to term the Savior, the Christ Child. She could have run from this. She could have said, "Thanks, but no thanks." She had a choice. But she says, "My soul magnifies the Lord." She says, "My spirit rejoices..." She says, "(God) has looked with favor on the lowliness of his servant." She understands that from now on, because of the choices she has made to face the road ahead, generations will call her blessed.
Knowing that something is happening in life that will forever affect your future is ominous and exciting. It is perilous and spectacular. The unknowns can paralyze you or they can make you soar.
Mary had no real knowledge of how things would turn out for her once she began the journey of becoming the mother of Jesus. She just knew that she couldn't care what would happen, she needed to live into that reality, that promise from God that she would be blessed... regardless.
George faces an uncertain future and yet he is able to run through the streets with joy saying, "Merry Christmas" to all the parts of Bedford Falls that were, before his realization, more of a burden than a joy.
How do we move into an unknown future, an advent of expectation, with a calm reassurance that God will "look with favor" on our lives, no matter what lies ahead? How do we begin to really LIVE again, despite not knowing what will happen to us tomorrow?
Email me or comment below.
Tuesday, December 4, 2012
Angel Second Class
Malachi 3:1-4
Luke 3: 1-6
One is coming who will prepare the way for you.
He will sit like a refiner and a purifier of silver.
John the Baptist says his mission is to tell people of the Coming Christ. His purpose is to make a straight path for Jesus, to refine a way for him to live into his life's purposes.
Not unlike our dear Clarence Oddbody, AS2. Angel Second Classs. Clarence feels a bit inept that he has never earned his wings, but the Divine was waiting to send him on a mission perfect for him. In that way, George and Clarence need each other. Clarence helps George out of his despair and into seeing that he really does have a wonderful life. George helps Clarence get his wings.
It's like that when we give of ourselves. We find that we, in turn, receive great benefits. When we learn to give without any hope or possibility of anyone giving us anything back, it becomes a blessing. That is what George has to discover about himself. He ends up in a set of life circumstances that, from the beginning, he never asked for or wanted. But, he gave of himself, all the while. He gave people loans, he trusted people to pay back without signed contracts. He was a man of strong character, even if he has a secret desire to be spending his life somewhere else.
Clarence needs George to get his wings. But he also learns that his role in keeping George going is monumentally important. He learns that it isn't about getting his wings, it is about showing someone the way, being a guiding light when all the person you are with sees is darkness.
John the Baptist ends up giving his very life. He sets a stage of radical change, of something coming that people will not understand. He understands his role in this, but feels he has to do it anyway. He understands that Jesus needs him to set such a stage. Jesus relies on John to get the ball rolling. If I may use theatrical metaphors, Jesus needs John's 'stage managing' for his 'curtain to open.'
We all rely on each other for salvation from our current chaos, for setting the stage for the next act. We need the people of our faith communities to hold us... and to push us into the spotlight when we are not sure we can do it anymore.
How do you see John the Baptist's role as vital in the Advent journey? Could George have come out of his despair without his prayed for Angel Second Class to save him?
Email me or comment below.
Luke 3: 1-6
One is coming who will prepare the way for you.
He will sit like a refiner and a purifier of silver.
John the Baptist says his mission is to tell people of the Coming Christ. His purpose is to make a straight path for Jesus, to refine a way for him to live into his life's purposes.
Not unlike our dear Clarence Oddbody, AS2. Angel Second Classs. Clarence feels a bit inept that he has never earned his wings, but the Divine was waiting to send him on a mission perfect for him. In that way, George and Clarence need each other. Clarence helps George out of his despair and into seeing that he really does have a wonderful life. George helps Clarence get his wings.
It's like that when we give of ourselves. We find that we, in turn, receive great benefits. When we learn to give without any hope or possibility of anyone giving us anything back, it becomes a blessing. That is what George has to discover about himself. He ends up in a set of life circumstances that, from the beginning, he never asked for or wanted. But, he gave of himself, all the while. He gave people loans, he trusted people to pay back without signed contracts. He was a man of strong character, even if he has a secret desire to be spending his life somewhere else.
Clarence needs George to get his wings. But he also learns that his role in keeping George going is monumentally important. He learns that it isn't about getting his wings, it is about showing someone the way, being a guiding light when all the person you are with sees is darkness.
John the Baptist ends up giving his very life. He sets a stage of radical change, of something coming that people will not understand. He understands his role in this, but feels he has to do it anyway. He understands that Jesus needs him to set such a stage. Jesus relies on John to get the ball rolling. If I may use theatrical metaphors, Jesus needs John's 'stage managing' for his 'curtain to open.'
We all rely on each other for salvation from our current chaos, for setting the stage for the next act. We need the people of our faith communities to hold us... and to push us into the spotlight when we are not sure we can do it anymore.
How do you see John the Baptist's role as vital in the Advent journey? Could George have come out of his despair without his prayed for Angel Second Class to save him?
Email me or comment below.
Tuesday, November 27, 2012
"I'm at the end of my rope"
Isaiah 64: 1-6; Jeremiah 33:14-16)
"O that you would tear open the heavens and come down..."
"The days are surely coming, says the LORD, when I will fulfill the promise I made to the house of Israel and the house of Judah. In those days and at that time I will cause a righteous Branch to spring up for David; and he shall execute justice and righteousness in the land. In those days Judah will be saved and Jerusalem will live in safety. And this is the name by which it will be called: "The LORD is our righteousness."
Ever felt lost, on the edge, hopeless, just certain that no matter how hard you've tried to do the right thing, you still end up at the end of your rope? Then you know how George Bailey feels in that moment at the bar when he sees an arrest warrant in front of him and the loss of $8,000 looming in his face like a cancer. He feels absolutely helpless. A powerful scene from the movie:
This, too, is the world of the people of Judah and Jerusalem. The world of diaspora. The world of never feeling at home because you might get trampled on again sometime soon. And this is much the same kind of atmosphere into which Jesus is born. A time when Herod is declaring that newborn sons will die and moms are running scared.
George Bailey shows us the depths to which we can fall into despair as humans, based on circumstances often out of our control. He is truly contemplating what reasons he possibly has to continue life as he knows it.
All this month, we will be exploring the theological insights in the classic holiday film, "It's A Wonderful Life." This first advent reading puts us in the right mindset. Times are dark. Life is chaotic and filled with unease. Into this place, we plead for our savior to arrive. Into this world, we ask the Christ Child to come to us.
What does it feel like to be at the end of your rope? What does bringing 'light into darkness' mean to you? How do you prepare to bring the Christ Child into the chaos of your world? Email me or comment below.
Tuesday, November 20, 2012
Born to Pay it Forward
John 18:33-37
Revelation 1:4b-8
I just read that Christ the King Sunday (which happens this Sunday) is a recent addition to the liturgical year. It was added in a time when respect for the church had fallen off and the control of nation states over churches was increasing. This was the time of the rise of Hitler and Stalin. Hitler's Mein Kempf had just been published when Pope Pius XI declared that the Roman Church would have a holiday to celebrate Christ as our one and only King. Wow. That puts some perspective on the day.
The Catholic Church and also the Protestant Churches deciding to add a day to the church calendar when we would declare boldly that our one and only King is Christ is actually a big deal, it turns out. Not a day we should shove in with the leftover turkey and sit patiently through while we tap our toes waiting for Advent to get here. This day deserves its own special LOUD AND CLEAR recognition.
This is the day we read of Pontius Pilate asking Jesus if he is King of the Jews. And Jesus declaring that his kingdom is not of this world because if it was his followers would be fighting to keep him from being handed over to the authorities. His purpose, he declares, is to testify to the truth.
In other words, we can't put Jesus in most of the boxes we have in our world and have him fit. He can't go in the political box. He can't go in the commercial/capitalist box. He can't go in the American Dream box. He can't go in the Hollywood entertainment box.
Jesus is here to speak only the truth. And if any of those categories above were to actually decide to be about the kind of truth that Jesus declares, they would need to do some serious reframing.
Revelation tells us that in his death and resurrection, Jesus made us to be a kingdom, priests serving God forever and ever. We are called to be the kind of king Jesus is, in other words. We have been called by his great sacrifice for his world to be the sacrificial leaders of our own.
Jesus, the nativity story and prophecies say, was born to pay it forward. Revelation tells us today that we were ALL born to pay it forward. All born to realize that being a kingdom of Christ is not about domination but about truth telling and putting God above any other facet of life. Being a kingdom of Christ is ultimately about putting ourselves on the line for peace every single day.
Being born to pay it forward is a noble and high cause. As we come to celebrate Christ the King this Sunday, ponder reverently your own higher calling. What is that "God instinct" calling you to that is noble and sacrificial? In what part of your life can you truly begin to live as Christ lived?
It sounds large and impossible, but paying it forward begins in small steps. Look at Jesus. His journey begins in a shelter for animals that the innkeeper allowed Mary to stay in so Jesus wouldn't be born on the streets. And his mom has to push him into performing his first miracle. And he is still Christ the King.
Revelation 1:4b-8
I just read that Christ the King Sunday (which happens this Sunday) is a recent addition to the liturgical year. It was added in a time when respect for the church had fallen off and the control of nation states over churches was increasing. This was the time of the rise of Hitler and Stalin. Hitler's Mein Kempf had just been published when Pope Pius XI declared that the Roman Church would have a holiday to celebrate Christ as our one and only King. Wow. That puts some perspective on the day.
The Catholic Church and also the Protestant Churches deciding to add a day to the church calendar when we would declare boldly that our one and only King is Christ is actually a big deal, it turns out. Not a day we should shove in with the leftover turkey and sit patiently through while we tap our toes waiting for Advent to get here. This day deserves its own special LOUD AND CLEAR recognition.
This is the day we read of Pontius Pilate asking Jesus if he is King of the Jews. And Jesus declaring that his kingdom is not of this world because if it was his followers would be fighting to keep him from being handed over to the authorities. His purpose, he declares, is to testify to the truth.
In other words, we can't put Jesus in most of the boxes we have in our world and have him fit. He can't go in the political box. He can't go in the commercial/capitalist box. He can't go in the American Dream box. He can't go in the Hollywood entertainment box.
Jesus is here to speak only the truth. And if any of those categories above were to actually decide to be about the kind of truth that Jesus declares, they would need to do some serious reframing.
Revelation tells us that in his death and resurrection, Jesus made us to be a kingdom, priests serving God forever and ever. We are called to be the kind of king Jesus is, in other words. We have been called by his great sacrifice for his world to be the sacrificial leaders of our own.
Jesus, the nativity story and prophecies say, was born to pay it forward. Revelation tells us today that we were ALL born to pay it forward. All born to realize that being a kingdom of Christ is not about domination but about truth telling and putting God above any other facet of life. Being a kingdom of Christ is ultimately about putting ourselves on the line for peace every single day.
Being born to pay it forward is a noble and high cause. As we come to celebrate Christ the King this Sunday, ponder reverently your own higher calling. What is that "God instinct" calling you to that is noble and sacrificial? In what part of your life can you truly begin to live as Christ lived?
It sounds large and impossible, but paying it forward begins in small steps. Look at Jesus. His journey begins in a shelter for animals that the innkeeper allowed Mary to stay in so Jesus wouldn't be born on the streets. And his mom has to push him into performing his first miracle. And he is still Christ the King.
Tuesday, November 13, 2012
What A Building Project Should Be
Then Jesus asked him, "Do you see these great buildings? Not one stone will be left here upon another; all will be thrown down."
These two scriptures hint at the same thing: what we have to offer God is only what God has already given to us. Nothing more. Nothing less. Hannah prays to the point of desperation for a child, whom she agrees to give to God, for God's purposes. She receives her blessing and offers Samuel before the Lord. Jesus implores those around him to understand that buildings are not lasting offerings to God, that they will be reduced to rubble in the end. His apocalyptic warning to the disciples is there is nothing that man builds that will last.
Put these two texts into one thought process and you have the idea that the only lasting offering we can offer before God is our fully human selves, just as Hannah offers sacrificially Samuel, her precious only son. (Reminds us, of course, of Mary, who offers the baby Jesus to God's will.)
We are the temple. Our lives are the temple. Our breath the bricks and mortar. Not any building we call church, whether that is an actual church building or a more hip place like a bar. No brick and mortar meeting place is able to be an offering to God.
We. are. an. offering. Our lives are the brick and mortar that builds the 'congregation' and keeps it strong.
But we fail to deliver that offering. We fear the commitment of fully laying our lives on the line to be used for God's purposes. It's much easier to hide in the pews (or chairs) than to throw ourselves prostrate on the altar area and say, "God, I am yours. Use me to your purposes."
What does it take to create a sustainable building project these days? The first answer is to understand exactly what you mean by 'building.' If you mean adding square footage and some windows and a new front door, that's all well and good, but remember Jesus's words when he says it will all be torn down in the end.
A sustainable building project starts with people who bring themselves as their gift to God. A sustainable building project lists as the primary goal the building up of a congregation, in service and witness to the world. A sustainable building project means caring for children and youth and offering the aged a chance to participate in abundant living. None of these involve hammers and drills and square footage. But they all require the greatest asset we have to be willing to part with: TIME.
What a building project requires most is TIME and ATTENTION and LOVE and SACRIFICE. Do we have what it takes to build Christ's kingdom in this place?
Tuesday, November 6, 2012
When All You Have Is Enough
Mark 12:38-44
As I sit at my desk, writing this blog, with people just outside my office door voting for the next president of the United States, I admit I am a bit taken aback by the timing of this week's lectionary passage. Really?
We have the gospel passage telling us of the scribes who parade around in their fine garb, 'devouring widows' houses,' which meant, basically, eating and drinking and using up the resources of those who could least afford to entertain them. The scribes, all the while, made sure they were publicly seen and acknowledged.
The scripture doesn't stop there, but also insists on telling us of the poor widow who gave every last coin she had to the offering at the temple, an offering, by the way, which was not mandatory for her, but voluntary. Jesus notes that the rich gave large sums, but only gave out of their abundance, in no way a sacrificial offering, in fact, money they would hardly miss at all. He notes the woman gave all of what she had, an amount of great sacrifice.
I can't help but think of the ridiculously insane amounts of money given for political ads during this campaign season, billions and billions of dollars...all for mostly negative and mostly false campaign slogans repeated over and over again. An abundant waste of precious resources, while people in this country went to bed hungry each night. And the campaign itself... often times seeming like scribes parading around in poor communities, 'devouring widows houses' and pretending they care about the needs of those who live there...
And yet, I am reminded that these stories told by Jesus are meant to teach us the power of sacrificial giving, the power of paying it forward.
This month we are focusing on that power of Paying It Forward. Last week we looked at our responsibility to continue paying forward the contributions of the saints who have gone before us. This week, we are given the example of giving as a form of worship. The scribes offered themselves to the church for show, for appearances. Any gift they gave was to be paraded around and lauded. The widow gave all she had, not to a required sacrifice, but to a voluntary offering.
A commentary I read posed this question, "What changes would our churches experience if more of us began to see giving as worship instead of obligation?" I might add to that: What changes would occur in our personal lives and our communities and our world?
Email me or comment below. May God be with us as we seek to be a nation of givers, rather than takers.
As I sit at my desk, writing this blog, with people just outside my office door voting for the next president of the United States, I admit I am a bit taken aback by the timing of this week's lectionary passage. Really?
We have the gospel passage telling us of the scribes who parade around in their fine garb, 'devouring widows' houses,' which meant, basically, eating and drinking and using up the resources of those who could least afford to entertain them. The scribes, all the while, made sure they were publicly seen and acknowledged.
The scripture doesn't stop there, but also insists on telling us of the poor widow who gave every last coin she had to the offering at the temple, an offering, by the way, which was not mandatory for her, but voluntary. Jesus notes that the rich gave large sums, but only gave out of their abundance, in no way a sacrificial offering, in fact, money they would hardly miss at all. He notes the woman gave all of what she had, an amount of great sacrifice.
I can't help but think of the ridiculously insane amounts of money given for political ads during this campaign season, billions and billions of dollars...all for mostly negative and mostly false campaign slogans repeated over and over again. An abundant waste of precious resources, while people in this country went to bed hungry each night. And the campaign itself... often times seeming like scribes parading around in poor communities, 'devouring widows houses' and pretending they care about the needs of those who live there...
And yet, I am reminded that these stories told by Jesus are meant to teach us the power of sacrificial giving, the power of paying it forward.
This month we are focusing on that power of Paying It Forward. Last week we looked at our responsibility to continue paying forward the contributions of the saints who have gone before us. This week, we are given the example of giving as a form of worship. The scribes offered themselves to the church for show, for appearances. Any gift they gave was to be paraded around and lauded. The widow gave all she had, not to a required sacrifice, but to a voluntary offering.
A commentary I read posed this question, "What changes would our churches experience if more of us began to see giving as worship instead of obligation?" I might add to that: What changes would occur in our personal lives and our communities and our world?
Email me or comment below. May God be with us as we seek to be a nation of givers, rather than takers.
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