Discover the Liberating Christ: A Faith That Questions

Merry Christmas! As we come together on this second day of Christmas, it seems appropriate to remember that the Christmas season begins on Christmas day and continues for twelve days to end just before Epiphany. And so we continue to celebrate the gift of Christmas today.

Over the last few weeks, we have heard stories anticipating Jesus coming into the world. We have heard the visions of the prophets, and we have heard the stories of the angels appearing to Zechariah and Mary. We have heard the stories about John, the forerunner along the way. And we have been told about the shepherds who were tending their flocks when the angels appeared to announce Jesus’ birth. Now on this first Sunday after Christmas, we find a scene of Jesus as a youth (see Luke 2:41-52; cf. 1 Samuel 2:18-20, 26).

One of the reasons I like this first Sunday after Christmas is because it is a reminder that Jesus, God in the flesh, lived a real life here on earth. So often, we read stories of the baby at Christmas and then jump right to full-grown Jesus starting his ministry in the world. We forget sometimes that Jesus lived a life in between.

Discover the Liberating Christ: Revolutionary Good News

Today we celebrate the Revolutionary Good News that is the birth of Jesus and the messengers who make God's presence known in the world. Foretold in the prophets and shared in the Gospels, the story came to those most in need of Good News (see Isaiah 9:2-7 and Luke 2:1-20). But why was this story such good news to those who heard it, and how does it remain good news to us today?

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“Don’t be afraid! Look! I bring good news to you…”

We have all heard this story. Many of us could likely recite the words by heart much as Linus does in ‘A Charlie Brown Christmas.’ The angel appears to the shepherds watching over the flocks at night, announcing the gift that is Jesus come into the world. 

I know it can be difficult for those of us so steeped in these stories to consider how the angel’s words would have been received. What is so revolutionary about the Good News that the angel proclaims? What made this news so compelling to those who heard it?

Discover the Liberating Christ: Believing in Everyday Love

Our season of waiting and expectation is almost done. The final Sunday of Advent. The final Sunday before Christmas. The next time we gather together, it will be to celebrate the birth of Christ. We gather at Christmas to celebrate God coming into the world, tearing down the ultimate barrier between us. But we’ll get to that next time.

Today, we continue to think about what it is that we are waiting for. What is it that we are hoping for? What does God coming into the world mean to us? 

Our readings for today paint a certain picture for us (see Micah 5:2-5a and Luke 1:39-55). In today’s readings, we see God choosing the least likely. Our readings show God choosing those who would be considered weak, outcast, marginalized as those most deserving of honor. Our readings show God giving preferential treatment to those most in need. Our readings show us that God does not choose the ones that our culture tends to tell us we are supposed to value.

Discover the Liberating Christ: The Work of Joy

 Advent is a season of many themes and many layers. We know that Advent is our season of expectation and waiting for the in-breaking of God in our lives and in our world. For those of us who feel assured in our faith, this can be a season of excitement as we experience the familiar stories, the memories of holiday seasons past, and the joy of lights and decorations and gatherings. We await with anticipation the baby in the manger and the goodness that means for our world.

At the same time, there are those on the margins, those who feel less certain about their faith, those who feel less certain about their lives, their ability to make it to the next paycheck, the likelihood they will see another day. Where is the joy of the season for those who are oppressed, forced to the margins, and living in precarious circumstances?

Discover the Liberating Christ: Shaking the Foundations of the World

Advent is our season of waiting and expectation for the coming of Jesus. We anticipate again the birth of the Christ-child at the same time as we look for his return in glory. The readings for the first Sunday of Advent, which we read last week, most explicitly call to mind Jesus coming into the world again. Reading several verses from late in the Gospel of Luke, we heard Jesus’ vision of the future, a future when the Human One would come in power and splendor.

This week, we turn primarily to the early chapters of Luke as we consider the initial coming of Jesus and all that would mean for the world. Even so, you may have noticed that Jesus doesn’t even get an explicit mention this week. As we consider the theme of peace, our focus is actually on Jesus’ cousin, John (see Malachi 3:1-4; Luke 1:68-79; Luke 3:1-6).

Discover the Liberating Christ: Rooting Our Hope in the Land

On this first Sunday of Advent, we begin our journey toward Christmas. Advent is our period of waiting and expectation for Jesus to come into the world. Jesus comes into the world as a liberator, showing a new kingdom. The kingdom of God is not like the world as we know it. But it is not in some distant future, and it is not in some far-off land.

We kick the season off with hope -- hope for all that God has done and all that God continues to do. Our readings on this Sunday help us see that our hope is not only for the future; our hope is rooted in the present, in the very places we find ourselves (see Jeremiah 33:14-16; Psalm 25:1-10; Luke 21:25-36).

Questioning Jesus: Are You the King?

Each year, on the last Sunday before Advent begins, we celebrate the feast of the Reign of Christ, also known as Christ the King Sunday. On this day we celebrate Jesus as our king. In some ways, this Sunday is an in-between Sunday. It is the finish line of our Christian year, marking the Sunday when the cycle of celebrations and readings comes to an end, preparing to start over again. It is the last Sunday in Ordinary time, but it reminds us of all that is coming as the Christian year starts over. And, this year, it helps us round out the readings of the last few weeks.

Over the last two months, we have spent our time together exploring many of the questions that Jesus was asked as he traveled. His disciples had questions for him. The religious leaders had questions for him. Random persons he encountered on the way had questions for him. Some of these questions were meant to test Jesus while others were asked out of a genuine desire to understand.

Today, Pilate presents us something of a contrast (see John 18:33-37). In some ways, he seems genuinely interested in the answers to his questions, but we also have to remember who he is. He is not a stupid man, so he is also cautious, uncertain what answers he will get and what they will mean. And as we celebrate Christ as our king, I suspect we may have some questions of our own.

Questioning Jesus: What Signs Will We See?

As we draw closer to the end of the liturgical calendar this year, we also draw close to the end of the Gospel of Mark. Over the last few weeks, we have seen Jesus on his final journey to Jerusalem. As he has moved ever closer to his final days, folks have had plenty of questions for him. In answering their questions, Jesus has done his best to help us all catch a glimpse of the kingdom of God. What does it look like? How do we get there? What will our lives be like once we are there?

In his final days in Jerusalem, Jesus has spent much of his time in and around the Temple. We know from other stories that he drives out the vendors and money changers. He teaches in parables. He answers the challenges of the religious leaders. He teaches them the most important commands. He speaks against religion that does not show love.

Questioning Jesus: How Then Shall We Give?

For most of the month of October, we read through Mark 10. Throughout chapter 10, Jesus is regularly questioned by those he encounters -- the legal experts, his disciples, and even strangers he meets along the way. All of this was taking place as Jesus began his journey toward Jerusalem and all that would happen there.

Last week, we jumped ahead to Mark 12. We skipped over chapter 11 because it sees the entry of Jesus into Jerusalem riding on the back of a colt (a story we normally reserve for Palm Sunday), the cleansing of the Temple, and other encounters with the priests and scribes (normally read during Holy Week). But this time of year, we are focused instead on the kingdom of God and what it looks like, so we continue to look at the ways in which Jesus is questioned. Last week saw Mark’s version of the Great Commandment story, with Jesus being questioned by one of legal experts about which commandment is the most important or the greatest. 

We are of course familiar with this story. It is the grounding of our lives as Christians and as members of this local congregation. Love God with all that we are, and love your neighbor as yourself. According to Jesus, and even the lawyer who is questioning him, nothing in the Hebrew scriptures is more important. Even more tellingly, the legal expert notes that no religious practice or ritual is as important as these two points. Following this, Jesus makes a somewhat cryptic pronouncement about the identity of the Messiah before we come to today’s reading (Mark 12:38-44).

The Way of Exclusion


The following is adapted and updated from a sermon preached at Bright Star UMC on October 28, 2018, and based on Mark 10:46–52.

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I wonder if you can picture it. Jesus has been traveling with his disciples around the countryside teaching, performing miracles, and challenging the religious authorities of his day. In the last 2 chapters of Mark, there has been not one but two feeding miracles, multiple accounts of healing, and more than one conversation with Pharisees and other authorities questioning Jesus about his beliefs and understanding of Scripture. As the stories about Jesus spread, more and more people were following him and coming to him for help and healing. These people heard the stories about Jesus and came to him with hope.

And yet, those closest to him were having trouble recognizing all that he was trying to teach them. The disciples have been blind to all that Jesus is trying to show them. They have failed to hear what Jesus is telling them about what is to come. They don't understand why he would need to go to Jerusalem. They don’t get what he means when he speaks of the coming resurrection that will follow. They don’t really understand the consequences of following Jesus. They argue over who is the greatest amongst them. They want to sit on the right and the left hand in the kingdom to come.

Over and over, they fail to see the kingdom that Jesus is showing them right now. They are only able to see in terms of the world they have known. And in the world they have lived in, there are winners and there are losers, those on top and those on the bottom, the Romans and the conquered. They have been on the bottom for so long; with the Messiah here, they figure they finally get to be on top. The disciples, the bulk of the crowds following Jesus, and even the religious and civil authorities are mainly paying attention because they cannot see the truth of the kingdom that Jesus is promising them all.

Questioning Jesus: Will You Do What I Ask?

As we continue to explore the people around Jesus and the questions that they asked him, we turn this week directly to the disciples themselves. We started the month with a story of the Pharisees who came to Jesus asking questions in order to test him. Last week, we heard from a potential follower who wanted to know what he needed to do to gain eternal life. This morning we hear a request from the sons of Zebedee and the aftermath of their questions among the entire group of disciples.

Today’s reading follows just a few verses from where last week’s readings ended (see Mark 10:35-45). Last week, you may recall, the reading ended with Peter pointing out that the disciples had left everything behind to follow Jesus. Jesus then tells them how anyone who gives up family and home and work in order to follow him will receive back one hundred fold family and home and work (with suffering!) in this life and the age to come. 

This of course makes a certain amount of sense given that Jesus is talking about the kingdom of God that is coming into the world. Let’s think for a moment about Jesus’ description here in light of all that Jesus has tried to get them to understand. In the kingdom, who is our family? Where is our home? What is our work? Is it any wonder that we will gain far more of those in the kingdom than what we may have left behind to follow Jesus? Jesus even makes it clear that the way of the kingdom of God will not be easy. Again, given that it is often in direct opposition to the ways of this world in so many ways, is that really surprising?

Questioning Jesus: What Must I Do?

As we know from reading stories about Jesus, people are constantly questioning him as he goes about the countryside preaching and teaching and healing. It is kind of natural for people to have questions. People want to understand things better. They have their own particular interests to clarify. They have a need that they know Jesus can address. I suspect many of us today still have questions for Jesus.

As we noted last week, one of the groups that frequently questions Jesus is the religious scribes and leaders. The Pharisees are primarily interested in making sure everyone is acting in the way they are supposed to act. Want to know how you are supposed to act? Well, look at what scripture says. If it doesn’t address exactly your concern, let’s figure out what comes closest and go from there. Following God for them as described in the Gospels is an either/or situation. Either you are doing what scripture says or you aren’t. There is no concern for nuance or the reason why certain rules are as they are. According to them, our purpose is not to ask why but simply to follow the rules as we find them. Maybe you have met people like this. There are people like this both within and outside of our churches.

Because Jesus tends to not always follow the exact letter of the Law, opting instead to consider the purpose of the rule, the Pharisees are suspicious of him. As we saw last week, they often question Jesus in order to test him. They aren’t looking to understand better. They are looking for Jesus to admit he doesn’t follow the Law so that they can have a reason to denounce him.

On the other hand, this week we continue reading Mark 10 and find a man who approaches Jesus with a very different question (Mark 10:17-31). Following his encounter with the Pharisees and then his blessing of the children, Jesus continues down the road. A man runs up and kneels before him. “Good Teacher, what must I do to obtain eternal life?” Unlike the Pharisees, this man acknowledges Jesus as a teacher with authority. He wants to learn from him. “What must I do?”

Questioning Jesus

As we read through the stories we have about Jesus, there is one thing that we find numerous times throughout the Gospels -- people are always questioning Jesus. Jesus is questioned by the Pharisees and other Jewish leaders. Jesus is questioned by his disciples. Jesus is regularly approached by random people on his journeys that have questions for him. There are even times that Jesus seems to question all that he is doing himself; consider his prayer in Gethsemane, for example. Truthfully, I think the questions didn’t stop with Jesus’ earthly ministry; many of us today still have questions for Jesus.

As we encounter these different questions in Scripture, we can see that they seem to have many different purposes. There are some who questioned Jesus in an attempt to trap him. There are some who wanted something from Jesus. There are some who simply want to understand what it is that Jesus is talking about. I think that there are those of us today who still ask questions of Jesus for all of these reasons and more.

Season of Creation: Mountain Sunday

This Sunday, we wrap up the season of creation with Mountain Sunday. What is it about mountains that can be at once holy, inspiring, and intimidating all at the same time? We will also consider the joys and perils of the "mountaintop experience."

Our starting point is the idea of the holy mountain found in Isaiah and in the Psalms (see Isaiah 65:17-25 and Psalm 48).

Season of Creation: Sky Sunday

This week, we continue our look at God's creation by considering the skies. We think about the role of the skies and heavens as a part of creation and throughout the Bible. We also consider an apocalyptic vision from Jeremiah that feels right at home in any number of post-apocalyptic stories in our modern world (see Jeremiah 4:23-28).

Season of Creation: Humanity Sunday

Today, we continue our focus on God’s creation -- both the act of creation and the things created -- by taking a look at humanity, that is, all the people who inhabit God’s creation. Picking up our reading in the book of Genesis where we left off last week (Genesis 1:26-28), we see that following the creation of the Earth itself, the skies, the seas, the sun, moon, and stars, the plants and all living creatures, God creates humanity. If you’ve been following along, you know that this is a continuation of the same day on which God created all the animals on land. On the fifth day of creation, God created the creatures of the sea and the birds of the air. Now on the sixth day, so far, God has created all of the wildlife on land -- the cattle and livestock, the crawling things, and all manner of animals. And seeing that it was good and pleasing, God continued by creating humans.

Season of Creation: Planet Earth Sunday

As we enter the month of September, we return again to the Season of Creation. Throughout the year, our readings routinely remind us of God’s providence, of all that God has done for us, of all that God has given us. But we don’t always dig into the details, and we rarely focus exclusively on God’s creation.

However, if we stop and think about it for a moment, the very act of creation is the beginning of God’s relationship with the world and ultimately with us. The Hebrew Scriptures, commonly called the Old Testament in the Christian Bible, begin with God forming creation into a pleasing design. God is pleased with the results as the Earth takes shape. 

Togetherness: Discovering Together

 This week we explore our sacramental life as we think about the ways in which we discover God in our worship life together. How does our worship, particularly our sacraments, point us toward God and unite us ever more to one another.

Our readings from Ephesians and John help us reflect on baptism and communion in the life of the church and how these elements of our worship life together join us together and help us to discover God's will for our lives (see Ephesians 5:15-20 and John 6:51-58).

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In our readings today, we continue the two themes we have been exploring over the last few weeks. In Paul’s letter to the Ephesians, we continue reading about Paul’s understanding of the Christian life.  What does it mean to be a member of the Christian community? What should it look like?

In the Gospel of John, we continue to read Jesus’ exposition on the Bread of Life. Today’s reading from John is very carnal as Jesus doubles down on his talk of eating his flesh and drinking his blood. No wonder some outsiders during the days of the early church thought Christians were cannibals and vampires.

On the surface, these readings don’t seem to have much to do with each other, but as we dig into them, we find that both of them are reflections on the sacramental worship practices of the early Christian communities. For the gospel writer, a thorough understanding of Holy Communion is obviously on his mind as he relates this story of Jesus. For several weeks now in our readings, ever since the story of the feeding of the five thousand, Jesus has been arguing with detractors about what it means to consume the bread that is his body and the wine that is his blood. It doesn’t take much for us to see the underlying connection to our celebrations of communion here. Our participation in Holy Communion is about participating in the same reality that Jesus is talking about here. It is about sharing and eating the bread from heaven. It is about receiving and drinking from the cup of blessing filled with the blood of Christ. 

Every time we come to this table, we are reminded of the meals that Jesus shared with his disciples, with his friends, and even with his enemies. He ate with all sorts. We also call to mind the heavenly banquet that we anticipate upon our arrival in heaven, a banquet laid out for all to take part in. As Jesus does throughout the passages that we have been reading, we are also reminded of the manna in the wilderness, bread provided by God to feed the Israelites as they fled captivity.

All of these scenes are called to mind as we gather at the table to share in the bread and the cup. Our prayers and our memories bring these other meals to mind, allowing us to imagine our own participation in all of these other meals. In the words of the well known hymn, we receive a “foretaste of glory divine.” (“Blessed Assurance,” UMH 369)

I want you to take a moment now to call to mind your most profound experiences of Holy Communion. Maybe it was a meal celebrated at the table in your current place of worship. Maybe it was an intimate gathering while on a retreat. Maybe it is your earliest memory of communion.

Now I want you to take a moment to think about other meals -- family dinners, birthday celebrations, working lunches. How are these meals similar? What makes them different?

One of the things I suspect we will begin to discover as we consider our memories is how difficult it can be to remain angry and disconnected from one another when we share food together. Food has the ability to unite us and connect us, just as surely as blood or shared interests can.

What happens when we taste the food together? Even better, what happens when we share the food together?

I touched on this some last week. I told you about the woman from San Francisco who was completely changed by her participation in Holy Communion.¹ Non-religious her entire life, her first time receiving the bread and cup completely changed her life and had a positive effect on the community around her as she lived into the changes in her own life.

What do we discover when we eat together, share together, work together?

As we have seen in the letter to the Ephesians over the last few weeks, this is exactly the kind of question that Paul is wrestling with. The section of Paul’s letter that we are reading today is a reflection on the ways that we are changed after our participation in our other primary sacrament in the church -- Baptism. In the preceding verses, Paul tells us that we have been changed by our experience, clothed in new garments, awakened into a new world. We have been claimed by Christ. These are all obvious allusions to our understanding of the changes that take place in us through our celebration of Baptism. 

In Baptism, we are claimed by God, made into new people. We pass through the waters, calling to mind Jesus' own baptism and his words about being washed and cleaned. We remember how Jesus washed the disciples' feet and how Peter demanded to be washed all over. As we pray over the waters, we are reminded of Jesus’ passage through the tomb and the parted waters that the ancient Israelites passed through on their way to freedom.

All of these images come into play as we celebrate the sacrament and as we read this passage from Paul today. Our passage immediately follows the reminder of our baptism. We could read it as, “because you have been baptized, be careful to live wisely” and so on. Because we have been redeemed, we should take care in how we live. Because we have been cleansed, we should take care in how we think. Because we have been claimed, we should take care in how we act. Being a Christian is both about being claimed by Christ, which is God’s act, as well as our claim to right and faithful living in response, which is our act.

Paul makes it clear that this is about our whole selves -- body, mind, and soul. It is about how we think, how we feel, how we act, and how we treat others. We are to act wisely instead of foolishly. Rather than remaining ignorant, we are called to “understand the Lord’s will” (Ephesians 5:17, CEB). Instead of getting drunk on wine, we should allow ourselves to be filled with the Spirit.

On the one hand, these are things we do on our own. We take the time to study God’s word, seeking God's will, to make sure we are not acting foolishly. We do our best to make sure our drinking does not lead to drunkenness. We seek out the Spirit’s guidance in our decisions and actions.

But these are also things that we do together. We look to each other for support when we are unsure how to act. We seek to discern and discover God’s will together so that we are not misled by our own willful thoughts. We seek to share in God’s Spirit together, both in our times of worship and in other times of our lives together. 

This is why Paul reminds us to speak to each other. He says specifically “speak to each other in psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs” (Ephesians 5:19, CEB). While not officially a sacrament like Communion and Baptism, our singing together can also call to mind and allow us to participate both mentally and emotionally in those things that have come before and in those things that are yet to be. “Psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs” remind us of the breadth of poetry that we find in the book of Psalms. Through the various Psalms, we find all manner of human experience on display and lifted up before God. We find joy, sorrow, vengeance, despair, grace. Almost any emotion or feeling we can have as a human we can find in our scriptures lifted up to God.

We are reminded of the choirs of angels that announced the birth of Jesus to the world.

We are reminded of all the times that Hebrew people sang in celebration -- of Miriam who sang as the Israelites passed through the waters of the Red Sea, of David who danced and made music before the Lord, of the songs of praise we find in Psalms and in other scriptures.

We are reminded of the angelic voices that continue to sing in heaven even now.

Through Paul’s words, all of these things are brought to mind. We are reminded to sing and make music before God and to always give thanks as we do. Again, these are things we might do on our own. But I think most of us recognize from experience how much sweeter it is when we do them together.

Of course, this reminder comes at a time when we must celebrate both together and apart. On the one hand, times like this remind us of the importance of our lives together -- the connections we feel when we are in the same spaces, the joy of singing together, the holiness of our sharing together at the table.

At the same time, the present realities of our world and community make gathering together physically perhaps unwise. How do we best show our love for one another and our communities in a time when being in physical proximity may be unhealthy or even dangerous? How do we continue to “speak to each other in psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs” when the very act of singing together can make others sick?

In the midst of an ongoing global health crisis, what are the ways that we as the church, as the Body of Christ still present in the world, can model both wisdom and understanding to the rest of the world?

What do we discover about God when we worship together?

What do we discover about ourselves?

How do we carry what we learn together out into the other days of our lives?

To help us think about what all of this continues to mean for us today, we closed our worship service with a hymn that I think may be familiar to many of you. I think at times, we may think of it as a song for kids, but “We Are the Church” is a reminder that, well, we are the church together. 

May we continue to seek out God's will together.

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¹ See Sara Miles, Take This Bread: A Radical Conversion

Togetherness: Sustaining Together

This week, we continue to explore our Christian life together. What does this life together look like? What does it mean to be united in faith in the midst of our differences? As we live this life together, God continues to sustain us and keep us united. 

As we continue this conversation, we continue to look at the words of both Paul and the gospel-writer, John (Ephesians 4:25-5:2 and John 6:35, 41-51). In writing to the Christian community at Ephesus, Paul is obviously concerned with the ways in which the community of believers live and share together. John offers us a further look at Jesus reflecting on the Bread of Life and what it means for us to partake of his presence.

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As I mentioned last week, Paul makes a shift here in the middle of the letter to the Ephesians. He transitions from his intentional praise of God and all that God has done for us to talking about what this new life we are called into looks like in practice. In other words, he starts talking about ethics.

I think most of us have some concept of what ethics is when we hear the word. We may think about ethical behavior or even systematized codes of ethics. The most simplified way we might think of ethics is the moral principles by which we govern our lives and our interactions with one another.

As we consider our readings from Ephesians over the last few weeks, we see that this is pretty much exactly what Paul is focusing on. God has called us into one body. God has called us, in the many forms and experiences we have, to join together in community, to be united with others in a single body made up of many different parts. 

Recognizing how difficult a thing this was (and perhaps always has been), Paul here gives us a simple list of what we should do and what we should not do. In some ways, this list calls to mind the Ten Commandments that any Jewish members of the community would have been aware of, but these simple rules are similar to ethical codes and morals that even non-Jewish members would recognize as beneficial to the community.

Get rid of lying and tell the truth.

Be angry with sinning but don’t remain angry with each other.

Don’t steal for a living but work for a living so that you have something to share.

Don’t speak in ways that tear down, but use words to build up one another.

Put aside bitterness, anger, and slander, and be kind, compassionate, and forgiving.

None of these things is terribly difficult, and yet we as people tend to have such a difficult time doing these simple things that would make life so much easier for everyone. To be honest, these are pretty good rules for living in community with others regardless of religious beliefs. Living with other people is easier if we tell the truth, share with one another, build one another up, and show kindness and compassion to one another.

Think about it. Try to imagine living as part of a community where the standards of living were to lie, steal, cheat, tear down, and destroy your neighbors. Not only does that not sound like a very pleasant way to live, it would be nearly impossible to accomplish anything as a community. How can a body that actively works against itself continue to grow and thrive?

Sadly, it may not be as difficult to imagine such a scenario as I wish it were.

But of course, the case that Paul is making is not just that we should act this way because it is the best way to live in community together, as good a reason as that may be. Paul’s argument is that we should act this way because God has forgiven us and offered us all the same grace. Now for those who are not believers, that may not sound like much of a reason, but we must remember that Paul is specifically writing to a Christian community made up of both Jewish and non-Jewish members. He wants them all to recognize that regardless of background they are called into the same community. And as those who have been called and believe, they are expected to be imitators of the one who has called them, who has joined them, who has nourished and sustained them.

“Be kind, compassionate, and forgiving to each other, in the same way God forgave you in Christ” (Ephesians 4:32, CEB).

It is not enough that this is simply a good way to live, but we as Christians have specifically been called to offer the same kindness, compassion, and forgiveness that we have received from God. Because we have received, we should share. 

Paul is speaking here explicitly of our lives together, but he is also reminding us that living our lives in this way will change the world. What happens when we are kind not only to those in our church and community, but those who are on the margins or even those who are actively opposed to goodness in the world?

What happens when we show compassion to those who are hurting without stopping to ask first if they are a Christian?

What happens when we forgive those who have hurt us even if we are not in community with them?

To be fair, this is not a blanket recommendation to forgive your abusers or to play nice with oppressors. As we read the story of Jesus that Paul is calling us to imitate, we see that when choices had to be made, Jesus always sided with those on the margins, those who were hurting, those who were oppressed over those who were in power. 

In situations where persons are being hurt, oppressed, or marginalized, where can we do the most good, offer the most kindness, show the most compassion?

Paul helps us think this through as he continues this line of thought.

“Therefore, imitate God like dearly loved children. Live your life with love, following the example of Christ…” (Ephesians 5:1-2, CEB).

As Christians, we have been called into a new way of living. No longer should we live as the world teaches us to live -- self-centered, self-serving, greedy, and judgmental. We should live lives in imitation of the one who came to show us that God loves us, wants to be in relationship with us, and wants us to live in positive relationships with one another. That is the model we see in the life that Jesus lived -- a self-giving love that calls us into communities of mutuality and care. We are sustained and nourished together in the community that we call the church.

Turning to our Gospel reading this week, we find Jesus continuing to talk about the nourishment that God provides to us. Following the miraculous feeding that Jesus accomplished, the people continue to follow him, seeking more signs and miracles. Jesus has been telling them that earthly bread will fill them for a time but will ultimately leave them hungry again. Instead, they must feast on the bread of life. This is a spiritually nourishing bread that satisfies the spiritual hunger of those who have felt empty and alone. Those who have been aching and feeling separate from God can once again know the fulfillment of that relationship. People do not need to live lives disconnected from God. We can feast on the bread of life. 

In the history of the church, we have considered this to be both physical and metaphorical nourishment. On the one hand, we might consider the mental and spiritual nourishment we receive in studying the life of Jesus. How can we be fed and nourished by what we read in the life of Jesus? How do the stories and teachings we find in the gospel stories feed us in ways that leave us feeling satisfied so that we cease to hunger and feel alone?

In a more physical sense, we also feast at the communion table. When we do, we are reminded of the ways in which we are connected to Christ and the ways in which we are connected to one another. We are nourished and made whole, and we return to the table regularly to be filled anew.

And when we take Paul’s injunction that we as the church are the body of Christ seriously, we may feel led to feed and nourish others as well. I heard a woman speak at the World Diakonia Fellowship in Atlanta back in 2009, I believe. This gathering was intended for those who identify with the servant ministry of the church from around the world and from all different denominations. But this particular speaker was a lay woman from San Francisco.¹ She had not been a believer or attended church for many years. In a new relationship, she started attending different churches. She was feeling that emptiness but couldn’t put a name to it. One Sunday, she was in an Episcopal Church. In receiving the bread and the cup at communion, she felt convicted. She was receiving the body and blood of Christ. At the same time, how was the body of Christ that is the church being offered to others in the same way? She became a member of that congregation and over the next few years started a food ministry in the church that was set up during the week on the communion table. Now, not only is the congregation fed and nourished from that table, so are others in the local community.

The psalmist tells us to “taste and see that the Lord is good.” When we read these stories, when we come to the table, we are reminded of how good God truly is. Paul reminds us that we are called to be imitators not only of Christ but of God. He reminds us that because we have been forgiven, we should also forgive. If we taste and see how good God is, how can we pass up sharing that goodness with others? 

Jesus tells us that this new life is for “whoever eats this bread.” It is not offered to only a few. It is not offered to a select group. It is offered to whoever will eat it. It is meant for everyone.

As a community called and nourished by God, we seek to live lives of kindness, compassion, and forgiveness. We seek to imitate God’s goodness and to live lives of love just as Christ loved us. We seek to nourish the world because we have been fed by the bread of life, bread that is offered for all to partake.

We do this not just to make our church and community better, but that all the world may be made better through us.

---

¹ See Sara Miles, Take This Bread: A Radical Conversion.

Togetherness: Living Together

 This month, we take our lead from the last two points from our July series. We are called to unity and we are also called to bring our differences into relationship with each other. Guided by our understanding of the Trinity, much of our Christian life together is caught up in the balance between unity and difference. 

This first week, we continue to take our cues primarily from Paul. In his letter to the church in Ephesus, he helps us think about what it looks like to live our lives together as the body of Christ (see Ephesians 4:1-16). We are united into one body, but we each bring something difference to the relationship. We each have a different part to play.

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In the last two weeks, I talked briefly about the interplay between our unity and our differences. Through Jesus we are united in one body. But we bring our full selves with us, all that we have experienced and all that we are. Our lives together as Christians are lived in the tension between our unity and our differences.

This month, we will explore a bit more what this looks like in practice. How do we all fit together into one body? How do our differences help make us better?

Called Into Relationship

This week we in some ways pick up where we left off last week. Over the course of this month, we have been discussing calling. Who are we called to be? What are we called to do? We have looked at the source of our calling and the ways that God provides us what we need to fulfill it. We have discussed our call to be a blessing to the world around us.

Last week, we explored a little of what it means to be joined to others in our calling, a notion we will explore in a different way today. Our reading from Ephesians last week helped us think about being united together. Unity implies that we are joined together in common goals and purpose. Unity suggests one whole.

But this week, we turn to a different nuance. Today we discuss relationship. In some ways, unity and relationship are similar, but relationship is a little bit different from unity. Unity is about the whole, about things being united together into one thing. And as Christians, we are united in purpose and core beliefs. But we are also in relationship with one another. We each have our own lives, our own experiences, our own thoughts and actions. While there are many things that unite us, there are also many things that make us different. Relationship is found in those points of difference.

Called Into One Body

This month, we have been on something of an exploration of calling. What does it mean to be called? Called to be what? Called to do what? We often think of calling as being about what we do in the world. “I am called to be a farmer.” “I am called to be a teacher.” “I am called to be a doctor.” As we think about Biblical stories about calling, we see those who are called to be leaders, called to be prophets, called to be healers, called to be “fishers of men.” 

When we look at it this way, calling is about what we do. Maybe it is something we are particularly gifted at doing that is recognized as a calling. Maybe it is something we are hesitant about doing but that we feel compelled to do. Maybe it is something we are inspired by others to do.

But our readings for today give us a slightly different nuance on calling (see Ephesians 2:11-22 and Mark 6:30-34, 53-56). Our readings today are not so much about what we do with this call but rather about what the call does to us.

Called To Be A Blessing

 As we continue to explore the idea of calling, of who we are called to be and what we are called to do, we find two very different readings before us today (see 2 Samuel 6:1-5, 12b-19 and Ephesians 1:3-14). Paul is writing a letter to the church in Ephesus while King David has gone to retrieve the ark and bring it to Jerusalem. David’s story is full of action, while Paul leaves us his words. But both of these stories will help us think about what it means to be called by God.

Called Into Power

This month our focus switches to the topic of calling. What does it mean to be called? Called to do what? Called to be what? 

Today, we begin our conversation with a look at two different stories about calling in the New Testament. Paul talks a bit about what his calling looks like, and Jesus calls the Twelve and sends them out to continue the ministry he has been doing (see 2 Corinthians 12:2-10 and Mark 6:1-13). What do these stories mean for us still today?

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During the month of June, we focused on the notion of faith. In particular, I tried to walk a line between our faith and God’s faithfulness. When we think about faith or talk about faith, whose faith do we mean? I hope that it helped you think more about faith and faithfulness and all that means for us as children of God.

This month, the readings in the lectionary continue primarily through the gospel of Mark and Paul’s letters, but they begin to turn us in the direction of a different topic common in the church -- the question of calling. Calling is the idea that we are meant to do or be something, that we are being called by some other power to accomplish something in our world. Maybe you think of mythology or fantasy stories, particularly those that follow the more or less traditional hero motif -- the chosen one who is called into a quest or a fight for which they were initially unprepared. Maybe you think of religious stories about calling -- Moses, who was literally called by a burning bush; Samuel, who was literally called by the voice of God; Isaiah, who heard God calling in the night; Paul, formerly Saul, who was blinded by the power of God and called into a new role. We talk about preachers, pastors, other clergy, evangelists, and teachers in the church as those who are called. The idea of calling even finds its way into the world outside of the church, as some look on their jobs as a kind of calling.

What does it mean to be called? Called to what? Called for what?

Sometimes the idea of calling takes on a mystical cast, becoming something almost other. Calling may be something that you think someone else has, something that is special, something that you think doesn’t apply to you. When we read the Bible stories I mentioned before, we see that those people had a profound experience of God. Most of us look at our lives and don’t have anything nearly as exciting as a burning bush or a live coal being touched to our lips by angels to point to as a source of calling. 

Or maybe we think that only church leaders have a calling. And to be fair, those who follow the path toward becoming a pastor or other clergy person in the church are constantly being asked about their call stories. From local church approval to seminary to conference interviews, calling is something we are pressed to think about every step of the way.

But I am here to tell you that all of us in this room today have a calling. And that calling is every bit as important and every bit as compelling as anything we might read in scripture or anything we might hear from someone we might consider holy.

Each of us is called by God. We are called into relationship, with God and with each other. We are called to live in those relationships for the betterment of the world around us. We are called to love the world around us so that God’s grace may be visible to all who would see it.

It is God’s grace that calls us, that reaches out to us; God’s ongoing faithfulness that continues to call us and lead us into something better. For those who are part of the book study right now, we might think about God’s prevenient grace here, the grace that is always reaching for us, even before we believe or understand who God is.

For each of us here today, God’s grace has called us into relationships that have led us to where we are now. There are people in our lives, perhaps family or maybe friends or others, who modeled a life devoted to God and God’s will for a better world. These relationships led us to be a part of the church, a part of something larger than ourselves. Through Baptism, we were dedicated to that calling to something more, perhaps as a child or maybe later in life. At the Table, we are continually strengthened and renewed by God’s presence and grace to continue that work to which we are called, working toward the world symbolized by the meal that we share, a meal open to all people who would come.

All of this is calling. All of this is God’s grace. As Paul reminds us, God’s grace is enough, or, as some translations have it, God’s grace is sufficient. Paul went through many trials and dangers as he spread the good news of Jesus in the world. He was constantly on the move, he was imprisoned, he was temporarily struck blind. Through it all, he could say that God’s grace was sufficient to see him through.

Perhaps some of you have had experiences like this, times in your lives when you had to rely solely on God’s grace to see you through. I know that I once went through a trying time when I was not sure how to keep moving forward. “God’s grace is sufficient” became my mantra through that time in my life.

God’s grace, the source of my calling, also became the strength to keep me going when I felt like all else was lost. Unlike Paul, I don’t look back and think that God put me through a difficult time just so the grace and power of Jesus could shine through. However, I do think that I went through a time when only that grace and power could save me. 

Through our calling, we are given the power that we need to fulfill that calling. We enter into relationships; we are washed and anointed; we are nourished and strengthened. All of this that whatever corner of the world we find ourselves in, we can work to make the kingdom of God visible to others. For some of us, that may be through standing up here on a Sunday morning and helping others wrestle with the scriptures and what these texts mean for us today. For some of us, that may be through loving the people around us wherever we may find ourselves on a daily basis. For some of us, it may be through being kind to the strangers we meet along the way. For some of us, it may be through nurturing and encouraging others to see the light in a world perceived as shadowy and chaotic.

For Jesus, his calling was in speaking truth and wisdom about God’s desire for relationship. It was about healing those in need, loving them into the kingdom of God in the present, not in some far off distant future. And it was about empowering others.

But our story in Mark today offers us some caution as well. Jesus returns to his hometown. On the Sabbath, he is found teaching in the synagogue as he often does. But unlike in other places he has been, the crowd in his hometown is less receptive. These people have preconceived notions of who Jesus is. He’s a carpenter, Mary’s son. The people watched him grow up along with his brothers and sisters. To them, that is all he will ever be. They are unable to hear the good news in the words he speaks. They recognize the power and the wisdom, but they can’t accept it from him.

I think about the world we live in today. Selfishness and self-centered ambition are often seen as the norm, and so many people may not be able to recognize or understand purely altruistic acts. They may look at someone and say, “we know that guy. He’s just looking out for himself,” or “we watched her grow up. I can’t believe she wants us to believe she has changed.” We have a hard time believing in someone working for good for no other reason than for the world to be a better place. Think about all of the “feel good” stories we hear in the news or see on social media. We celebrate and laud situations when others lend a helping hand or try to support someone in need because the act is seen as rare enough to be newsworthy.

Jesus is unable to get around the disbelief and scoffing of the people who knew him before he began this particular calling. He can’t get people to accept that what he says is true and genuine. They simply cannot believe that Jesus has anything to offer them. How could he?

So Jesus moves on. He continues teaching and healing in the surrounding villages. And then he sends the Twelve out to do the same things. He calls them, granting them authority to do the work that he has been doing. And he prepares them for the possibility that they may be ignored in some places, just as he was in his hometown. Still, he calls them.

The Twelve had seen all that Jesus had done so far. They knew in a way that the people in Jesus’ hometown could not. They had heard the teaching. They had seen the healings. Jesus gave them the authority and power to do the same. And so they went.

The Twelve went out and proclaimed the things they had heard, the things they had experienced. They talked about how their lives and the lives of others had been changed for the better. They talked about the kingdom of God coming into the world and what that kingdom looked like. They cast out demons and healed the sick. The kingdom of God grew in the world because of them.

How has your life been changed by God’s call on you?

Where have you seen God’s power at work?

Where have you experienced God’s grace?

How has God’s call made a difference in the world around you, no matter how big or how small that difference may seem?

As we talked about a few weeks ago, we don’t always know how God’s grace at work in us can change the world for the better. Sometimes we only get to plant the seed without knowing all that will grow from it.

But still we work toward that better world. Still we live into God’s kingdom, a kingdom that calls us to live in loving relationship with God and others. We live as if that kingdom is already here, even when it may be hard to see the evidence of it in others.

We live in that kingdom because we have been called into it, and we have seen the power of that kingdom to change the world for the better.

In a moment, we will share in a foretaste of that kingdom. When we gather at the Table that Jesus has called us to, we catch a glimpse, at least for a moment, of what that kingdom may look like. Regardless of who we are, no matter what gender, what background, what we have done, what we have left undone; regardless of social status; regardless of all the ways in which we tend to divide ourselves -- Jesus invites us all to the Table.

At this Table, we share in Christ’s power.

At this Table, we share in God’s grace.

At this Table, we are made anew.

At this Table, we are nourished and sent forth.

At this Table, we are called to live in the kingdom of God.

A Faith That Heals

As we have explored the interplay between our faith and God’s faithfulness this month, I have tried my best to turn away from some of the more common messages we sometimes hear about faith to focus instead on how it is ultimately God’s faithfulness that does the heavy lifting. Our faith is the tiniest seed. Our faith can feel lonely and cause conflict with loved ones. Our faith can falter when we think we are the ones doing the work. And yet, God creates great things, calling us into new families, and never leaving us alone.

Our last topic this month is the one that leaves me feeling the most cautious and uncertain. I touched on this briefly last week as I spoke of my discomfort with so much of the talk we hear about what our faith is supposed to do. As Jesus says so many times, our faith makes us whole; we are healed because of our faith (see Mark 5:21-43). Sometimes we read or hear these words, and we imagine that if we just had enough faith, if we just believe hard enough, God will have mercy. It is difficult not to think this when we read stories like the ones we have today. It is especially hard if we have ever heard church leaders or family members express exactly that sentiment. Somehow we are failing in our faith if we are not made into the image of wholeness that the rest of the world has for us, an image that we often carry within ourselves, an idea of what our lives should be or should look like. These ideas can make any chronic illness doubly debilitating. We have not only the disease to deal with, but the guilt that our faith isn’t stronger. 

A Faith That Protects

Faith is a funny thing. There are so many different things we can mean when we talk about faith. We can mean a religious tradition, our personal beliefs, our trust in God. And many times, our the notion of faith gets misused, as if all the bad things that happen in someone's life are somehow due to lack of faith. But I think that frequently the way the Bible talks about faith is not entirely (if at all) about an individual person's faith. 

Today, we look at what it means for God to be faithful in times of peril. What does it mean for God to protect us? To help us explore what this looks like, we look at readings from both the Hebrew Scriptures as well as the Gospel (see 1 Samuel 17:32-49 and Mark 4:35-41). Our music as well contributes to our understanding of faith and faithfulness as we consider the poem/hymn "Lift Every Voice and Sing."

Today also marks a further shift in my local congregation towards a new normal -- bulletins, hymns, and multiple scripture readings. How do all of these pieces come together to give us a more complete understanding of God's ongoing relationship to humanity?

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This month, we have been talking about faith, but not really in the usual sense. We haven’t so much focused on our faith and what we can do with it as we have explored God’s faithfulness and what that does for us.

For me, I sometimes get a little uncomfortable when we start talking about faith. There is a history of misunderstanding or outright misuse of the idea of faith. On the one hand, we talk about the faith of those who have come before, the trust that they had that God would provide. For some of us here, we can look at these walls around us and see a living example of the faith of those who came before, who acquired this land and built this space with their own hands to provide a house of faith not only for themselves but also for those who would come after. That is a faith to look up to and to seek to emulate.

On the other hand, we know stories of faith healers and those like them, who turn our everyday circumstances into a matter of faith. If we just had a little more faith, our job would be okay, our relationships would be okay, the cancer would go away. We could take up our mat and walk. And for the most part, those who say such things are well meaning people.

It is a tricky balancing act between being faithful and trusting in God and worrying that we don’t have enough faith because life doesn’t always work exactly how we think it should. This is one reason I find it is helpful to look at God’s faithfulness when we talk about faith. I find that our faith is mostly about trusting in God’s faithfulness. Not that such faith is necessarily any easier.

Over the last two weeks, I have tried to help us explore some of the ways in which God remains faithful in ways that we can see and recognize around us. We talked about how God draws us together and makes us one family united in Jesus. We can look around ourselves on any Sunday and see familiar faces. But we also recognize that we all come from different places and different experiences. Even so, God calls us together into one body, one family, united in Christ to continue his ministry of love in the world, united with all the other Christians meeting in their places of faith both near and far.

Last week, we talked about the ways in which God provides far more than expected. The tiniest seeds can provide shelter and shade and sustenance. Jesus reminds us that it is the same with the kingdom of God. Just the tiniest seed of hope and faith can lead to big changes in the world, changes that can’t always be predicted judging by what we are able to see. But every act of hope and love we live in the world plants a seed for God’s kingdom to take root.

This week, we are beginning to expand our worship a little more, moving in the direction of a new normal as the health conditions continue to slowly improve in our area.  I find that reading more than one scripture in worship each week helps us get a better picture of humanity’s relationship with God through generations. We can see both how the ancient Hebrew people understood their relationship with God as well as how those who followed Jesus understood some of those same stories through new eyes.

Our first reading today is from a story that is familiar. The story of David and Goliath is one that many of us likely learned as children, though there may be those who didn’t hear it until much later. The figure of David in the Bible is a complicated one. From humble origins as a shepherd to terrible acts as king, he is often lifted up as a Christ-like icon from the Hebrew scriptures. In fact, Jesus is spoken of as the son of David. 

While some of the stories later in David’s life turn him almost into a villain, here we get a sense of why he is lifted up as a model of faith. The Hebrews and the Philistines have been at war. One of the Philistine’s, Goliath, is a giant of a man, most likely just under 7 feet tall. Twice a day for forty days (there’s that number again), he would come out between the two armies and call out for the Israelites to send a challenger so that the battle could be decided in single combat. Now the king at the time, Saul, was the largest man in his army, and therefore the obvious challenger, but he was afraid of the Philistine and would not fight him.

As described, David is still quite young. He has been a shepherd and is in the army as something of a squire perhaps rather than as a soldier. But he ultimately steps forward and volunteers to face Goliath. The king offers him armor and weapons, but David shrugs them off, feeling overwhelmed and weighed down by the heavy equipment. Instead, he faces Goliath as a shepherd carrying only his staff and his sling and a handful of stones.

While the story itself is meant to show that Saul is unfit to lead Israel and that David is the obvious choice to be the new king, I want to draw your attention just to the first few verses of our reading today. I do this cautiously, because the story is not really about faith, so I don’t want to turn this into a lecture about how we should all have faith like David. At the same time, this is one of those examples of people in the past displaying their trust in God’s faithfulness. Perhaps that is a fine line, but one I think we owe it to the story and to ourselves to walk.

You see, Saul is nervous about letting David face the giant. Goliath has been fighting for years, and David is still only a boy. But David argues that he has tended his father’s sheep for years. In doing so, he has had to defend the flock from lions and bears, chasing the animals off when he can and fighting and killing them when necessary.

Then he says, “The Lord, who rescued me from the power of both lions and bears, will rescue me from the power of this Philistine” (1 Samuel 17:37, CEB).

David knew that God is faithful. He knew that he could trust in God to continue to be faithful. God would protect him now just as God had protected him before. God was with him when he protected the flocks. God will be with him as he faces Goliath.

Of course, we know that things are rarely this easy. This is why I remind us that this particular story is about highlighting that David should be king rather than Saul and not really about having faith. It is too easy to take these words and decide we should blindly enter any situation simply because we trust that God will get us out of it. We know that God is always at work for good in the world, but that good does not always come when and how we expect it.

Turning to our Gospel story today, just look at the disciples. Again, here is a group of people of faith, those closest to Jesus. They have seen something in Jesus, something about him that makes them believe in him and follow him. Jesus has just been talking to them about the nature of the kingdom of God, and now they are traveling across the lake. A great wind comes up, blowing the little boat around and creating waves that threaten to capsize the boat, filling the boat with water, and Jesus is asleep in the back of the boat. Finally the disciples wake Jesus up. “Don’t you care that we’re drowning?” (Mark 4:38, CEB). Some of these men are fishermen. They no doubt understand the predicament they are in. They are certainly aware of the dangers of being out on the lake in weather like this. This is not an irrational fear. This is not like king Saul, leading his army into war but unwilling to engage in single combat himself. These are men who know the water and what will happen if things don’t change. 

As soon as he awakens, Jesus commands, “Silence! Be still!” The gospel writer makes it clear that Jesus is speaking to the wind and the water, but given his next words, it is not hard to imagine that he is speaking to the disciples as well. He turns to them next and asks, “Why are you frightened? Don’t you have faith yet?” (Mark 4:39, CEB). This seems an odd thing to ask the men who are traveling the countryside with him, men who have seen the miracles he has performed, men who have heard his teaching, men who think that he is leading them on the correct path to live a life of faith in relationship with God. “Don’t you have faith yet?”

Taken at face value, the faith of David in the face of the Philistine and Jesus’ rebuke in the face of the storm, it reminds me of folks who live in places frequented by hurricanes who figure they’ll just wait it out. Folks who see the flooded bridge and figure they’ll trust that it is okay. Maybe things will work out, and maybe they won’t. But is that really the same thing as faith? Is that really what Jesus means in this instance? Is that really what David means in his monologue? Just trust in God and blindly go into every dangerous situation?

I think each of them meant something a little different. Like I said before, David’s story isn’t really a story about faith. His story is about setting up the next king of Israel. It makes more sense to think of him as the main character on your favorite TV show. No matter how dangerous the situation seems, he is going to escape to fight another day. At the same time, it is a story of faith, of God’s faithfulness. David knows that God has been with him other times he has faced dangerous foes. He knows that God will be with him no matter the outcome. He figures it will be in his favor, but even if it isn’t, God remains faithful.

I think this is the nuance that Jesus is talking about when he questions the disciples' faith. It is less a question of, “don’t you trust that you will survive” and more a question of “don’t you trust that I am with you.” God’s protection isn’t always about protecting individuals from harm. Sometimes God’s protection is simply the promise that God will be with us, even if we do come to harm. God's protection is a promise that his kingdom is coming into the world. It isn't always about the individual; sometimes it's about the people.

This is the message I get from our first hymn today. “Lift Every Voice and Sing” started as a poem written by a black man to celebrate the centennial of Abraham Lincoln’s birth. It was a poem about recognizing God’s faithfulness, God who released him and his people from captivity. A God who was with them through all of the horrors of enslavement. A God who brought them forth into a new world. I feel like the poem acknowledges that trusting in God was about having faith as a people, not necessarily about individual faith. And it also acknowledges that having faith does not mean that all pain and sorrow will cease. It is a faith based in reality, a faith that understands that God doesn’t always directly stop the pain, but God always sits in that pain with us, working toward a better tomorrow.

It is also a faith that points to the promised land that is still yet to come. Even as it was written to celebrate release from enslavement in honor of the President who worked to make that happen, it was also written during the same time period that memorials and statues honoring the Confederacy were popping up all over the South. It is a song of faith for all that God has done, and a song of hope for all that God continues to do.

What does it mean to have faith through the horrors of enslavement as it existed in our country? 

What does it mean to continue to have faith when there are signs all around that some people don’t want that way of life to be over?

What does it mean to continue to have faith when your personal safety isn’t guaranteed?

This is the type of faith that Jesus was talking about. He never promised the disciples safety, but he did promise to be with them. He promised to guide them and give them strength. He promised that the kingdom of God was coming into the world.

As the kingdom of God spreads, as more people are called to participate in this family, as more seeds are planted, the world will grow into a better place. Jesus promises that he will be with us every step of the way. God is faithful. Let us trust in that.

A Faith That Provides

As we continue this week to look at the connection between our faith and God's faithfulness, we take a look at some of the the parables that Jesus shared with the crowds and with his disciples.  While our specific reading today (Mark 4:26-34) contains parables directed at the disciples, we consider the entire chapter as we think about all that God provides (see Mark 4).

One of the things that we learn today is that Jesus spoke to the people around him in images that they could relate to in order for them to understand the vision of the kingdom of God that he was sharing. While the parables may be confusing to some of us, the talk of soil and seeds and harvest would have been things people in the crowds would be familiar with.

The other thing we learn is that Jesus calls us to plant the seeds of the kingdom as we walk through this world. We don't always know what will come of these seeds or how they will grow, but God, who remains faithful, nourishes the seeds that are planted and sees them to fruition.

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A Faith That Loves

As we come into the summer months, I've been thinking about faith. Specifically, I've been considering the difference between our faith and God's faithfulness. I don't say this to judge anyone's faith; we each know the truth about our personal faith. But no matter how strong (or not) we may feel our faith is, we can rest sure in the fact that God remains faithful.

This week, we consider a sometimes misunderstood text in Mark (see Mark 3:20-35). Here is Mark, we find Jesus defending his ministry against the scribes who are trying to demonize him and highlighting the new family that God has made out of those who are in ministry with Christ. Through this text, we consider a faith that loves us, that draws us together, that joins us together with people from different backgrounds into a new family joined by a common cause.

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Our story today begins shortly after Jesus has appointed the Twelve. Mark lists out the names of the apostles, even giving us a subtle hint that Peter, James, and John are the closest to Jesus. Jesus has been traveling the countryside followed by his disciples and casting out unclean spirits. From among his disciples, he called the Twelve and appointed them “to be sent out to proclaim the message, and to have authority to cast out demons” (Mark 3:14-15, NRSV). 

This is what is going on as we come to the story today. Jesus has been doing the ministry for which he is best known -- teaching, healing, casting out unclean spirits. Crowds of people are following him from all over Judea. We get the impression that it is difficult for Jesus to keep up with the crowds. The disciples must keep a boat nearby so that Jesus can escape to the water if the crowds become too intense. And then we are told they come to a house but are unable to sit and eat due to the number of people surrounding them.

It makes sense that he would have wanted to share his ministry with the Twelve. Together, they would be able to reach more people. Together, they can spread the news farther, heal more people, cast out more unclean spirits. With Jesus guiding them, there is no end to what they can accomplish together.

Mark then sets up an interesting dynamic. We are told that Jesus’ family comes to restrain him, having heard people saying that Jesus is out of his mind. Those who knew him before he took up his ministry are concerned about the things that Jesus has been saying, though probably not for the reasons we might assume. Their fear most likely stems from a fear of him being seized by the authorities. 

In the Flesh: Sent Out In Jesus' Name

Though the official celebration of the Ascension was this past Thursday, many churches celebrate this event on this Sunday. Looking at the summary of this event s found in the first chapter of Acts (see Acts 1:1-11), we consider Jesus' parting words to the disciples who were present that day. What did it mean for them to watch Jesus go up into the heavens? What did he expect from them? What does it mean for us still today?

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On this Sunday we celebrate Jesus’ ascension into heaven. Traditionally, the Feast of the Ascension was actually this past Thursday, forty days after Easter Sunday. Our Scripture today tells us that Jesus appeared to the disciples over a period of forty days, and so the celebration in the church follows that statement literally.

Of course, if you read even a few of the more well-known Bible stories, you know that the number forty occurs frequently -- the flood that lasted forty days and forty nights, the forty years that the Israelites spent in the wilderness, the forty days that Moses spent on the mountain with God, the forty days that Jesus spent fasting in the wilderness after his baptism. It occurs frequently enough that we might begin to suspect that the number is being used in a figurative sense instead of a literal one. Kind of like when we say “the last time I saw you, you were knee high to a grasshopper” we simply mean someone was much smaller the last time we saw them, the number forty as it appears in scripture seems to represent a lengthy period of time. I have heard it said that it is meant to represent a time sufficient for things to happen -- the flood lasted long enough to accomplish its purpose, the Israelites wandered in the desert long enough for God’s purposes to be served, Jesus spent long enough with the disciples for them to be prepared for what was next.

In the Flesh: Chosen Family

This week, we continue to see the effect that the disciples' encounters with the risen Christ in the flesh had on their ministry. But we also consider the fact that the disciples showed up in the flesh for other people. In doing so, the disciples extended the body of Christ, including yet more people into the family (see Acts 10:44-48).

At the same time, our story today makes it clear that even while the disciples went forth spreading the word, God is the one still at work. God is the one who chooses us, who invites new people into the family, who extends the family beyond the boundaries we might set.

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As we have been since Easter Sunday, we continue to consider today how the encounter with Jesus continued to affect the disciples and those they encountered in turn. Even so, today’s story is a little bit different. We find Peter speaking to a mixed group of believers, both those who are Jews (the circumcised) as well as those who are non-Jewish (the Gentiles). There is no appearance of Jesus in our story today. And yet, we know that Peter is only there because of his encounter with Jesus in the flesh. That is the event that strengthened him for his ministry, and prompted him to be in this place.

Looking back in this chapter, we are told that the non-Jewish persons referred to in our story are a Roman Centurion and members of his household who were already believers in God. This Centurion supported those in need among the Jewish people and prayed constantly. A messenger from God, an angel, appeared to this man and told him to summon Simon Peter to come to him.

The next day about noon in another town, Peter is on a rooftop praying. While praying he becomes hungry. He has a vision of a giant linen cloth lowering from heaven. On the cloth are animals of every kind, some considered clean, some considered unclean. A voice from heaven tells him to get up, kill, and eat. Peter protests that he will not, for he has never eaten anything impure or unclean. The voice responds, “Never consider unclean what God has made pure” (Acts 10:15, CEB). This happens three times before servants from the Centurion arrive to invite Peter to come to the Centurion’s home. Peter agrees to go with them, understanding that the vision he had is about more than just food. Arriving at the Centurion’s home, Peter enters into conversation, talking about all that he has understood about God’s love for all people.

Our reading today opens as Peter finishes speaking and the Holy Spirit falls on everyone present, Jews and Gentiles alike. The Jewish believers who had come with Peter were amazed that the Spirit had been granted to these Gentiles, these outsiders. But Peter points out that they can’t deny the evidence of God’s gift to these people. If God has included them, who are they to deny them entry into the community of believers in Christ?

One of the things that Jesus tried to make clear is that we are all one family with God as the head of the family. The reaction of the other Jewish believers who traveled with Peter makes it clear just how difficult the implications of this were for them to live into. Even today, I think many of us have likely had the experience of hearing or being told that certain people do not belong in the church for some reason. And yet, we continue to see evidence of the Spirit even among those who others might exclude.

As many of us grow up and grow older, we may move out of our family home and find new places to live. We develop relationships with others that may go beyond what we might think of as friendships. Those closest to us may become like family, but unlike the families in which we are born, these are the families we choose for ourselves, our chosen family. 

For some of us, these families may grow up around similar interests. I have played sports with people who became my brothers and sisters. I’ve had friends so close that they know all of my deepest secrets and love me just the same. In seminary, there was a group of us who all lived in the same apartment building who would gather at least once a week for a communal meal to talk about our studies and what was going on in the world. We have stayed in touch long after we all graduated and went into ministry in different places. Our kids think of each other as cousins. We became family.

As I think about this idea, I am reminded of the recent musical, The Greatest Showman. While a little light on the historical accuracy, the movie does a great job of highlighting the ways in which groups of people become family, a family not defined by birth but by the ways we choose to be together. The character of Barnum in the movie pulled together a group of people who were considered outsiders, at best, by the rest of society. These people existed on the fringes of society and were often excluded and ignored, and sometimes they were physically abused just for their existence. Barnum taught them to be proud of who they are. He included them when others would exclude them. He even brought in a man from high society who came to realize that this group of people others would choose to exclude are as worthy (if not more worthy) of his affection as those who are like him. At the end of the film, we see that family takes many forms, each as important as the other.

For many believers, the church becomes a family. Many of us are like minded, holding one another up in good times and bad, supporting each other when we are in need. We are brothers and sisters in Christ, united by a common mission -- to spread the love of God as shown to us in Jesus Christ.

This is largely what our story today is about. About becoming united in our mission. But there is an important difference here that I think is sometimes easy for us to overlook. Often when we think of the idea of chosen family, we think of those we have chosen to be around, those we have chosen to associate with. We are the ones doing the choosing. But our story today makes it clear that those who make up the church, those who are believers, are a little bit different. 

We are God’s chosen family. And, just as Peter told those who traveled with him, we don’t get to decide who is a part of that family. God chooses to include us all in this family. Not just some, not those that meet our criteria, not those that follow only certain rules of ritual cleanliness. God chooses both those we might choose to include as well as those we would exclude.

For those of us here in the United States, in addition to being a day on which we come together to celebrate God as shown to us in the person of Jesus, today is also Mother’s Day. This is a day we acknowledge and celebrate the mother’s in our lives. We remember those who have nurtured and provided for us in the role of mother. For many of us this may be our birth mother. For others of us, the role of mother may have been played by someone else, someone that we chose or maybe someone who chose us. And for many people this is a day of joyful celebration.

At the same time it can also be a difficult day for some people. We may remember the mother who is no longer with us, the mother with whom we had a strained relationship, the mother we never knew. It is also a day to acknowledge that there are those who wished to be mothers who were unable to be for some reason. It is a complicated day, a day made more complicated when we think back to how it began.

While not officially recognized as a national holiday until 1911, the push for a day when mothers would join together to work for peace so that their children would not have to go to war began in the ruins of the American Civil War. The initial proclamation made in 1870 called on mothers to be the ones to push for peaceful settlement in all conflicts. It was the daughter of one of these earlier women that pushed for the creation of the holiday in memory of her mother. As the celebration began to spread around the world, people quickly began to acknowledge that it is not only birth mothers who nurture and provide in the same way, but there are many people who participate in the act of mothering -- grandparents, neighbors, friends, school teachers, even the church, to name a few, all play a role in the form of nurture we so often associate with mothers.

In Scripture, there are places where God is described with qualities we often associate with mothers. God as a nursing mother. God as a mother eagle. God as a mother hen, gathering in her chicks to protect them. God chooses us and includes us in the family.

In the middle ages, many mystics described God as a mother. One of the most well known, Julian of Norwich, was an anchorite in England in the late-14th century. She had a series of visions of God and was one of the first published women writers in England. She even developed the mothering image further, referring to Mother Jesus in her writing.

As we go into our week, I pray that we will remember that God chooses us, God includes us, God nurtures us, God protects us. God is our mother, and she makes us part of one family.


In the Flesh: Proclaiming

Today, we take another step away from the post-Resurrection appearances of Jesus to look at how those encounters affected what came next. We started this last week with one of the letters attributed to John. We were able to look at one of the people that knew Jesus most closely and to consider the story he told about Jesus and what Jesus called us to do and to be in the world. He was someone who knew Jesus intimately and who we can be certain was present for at least some of the appearances of Jesus.

Our reading from Acts today (Acts 8:26-40) gives us a look at a different disciple. Here we meet a man who may or may not have followed Jesus during his life, but one who most definitely committed his life to the work of the disciples in the period shortly after Jesus' post-Resurrection appearances. What impact did Jesus' life, death, and resurrection have on this man? How was he empowered to go forth into that world?

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In our story today, we continue to explore how the disciples’ encounter with Jesus in the flesh after his resurrection had a profound effect on all that came after. Today’s story moves beyond the Twelve apostles that we are most familiar with to show us a different follower of Jesus.

Our reading opens with an angel appearing to Philip. Now you may recall that there is a Philip in the gospels that was first a follower of John the Baptist and later one of the Twelve apostles. However, tradition tells us that this Philip is a different one. 

Jumping back a couple of chapters to chapter 6 of Acts, we find that members of the Greek-speaking community had raised some issues with the Apostles. It seems that the Jewish-speaking leadership had been neglecting the needs of Greek-speaking widows and others in the distribution of food and other ministries of the early Christian community. The Apostles tell the Greek-speaking believers to choose seven from among their own to be ministers within their community. Though it seems to be a misreading of the text, these Seven eventually came to be known in Christian tradition as the first deacons. (That's a conversation for another time.)

Among these seven is a man named Philip. It is this man who is greeted by an angel in our story today. The angel tells him that he should travel a certain road at a certain time that day. And so he sets out.

At the same time, an Ethiopian man is on his way home from Jerusalem. He happens to be traveling the same road. As he travels, he is reading from the prophet Isaiah. He is apparently reading it out loud, for when the Spirit nudges Philip to get closer, Philip hears the Ethiopian man reading from the prophet. And so he calls out to him.

Now, as I think about the world we live in today, I try to consider how people might respond nowadays to such an interjection. Imagine you are walking through a park and you see someone reading on a bench. What happens when you go over and ask, “Do you really understand what you are reading?” Better yet, imagine you are the one reading when someone else comes over and asks you that question. 

I kind of doubt that any of us would react as the Ethiopian does in our story today. Rather than get annoyed at best or angry at worst, the Ethiopian responds with a question of his own. How can I understand this if there is no one here to explain it to me? And then he invites Philip to climb up into the chariot with him. The Ethiopian is reading a passage from Isaiah and asks for Philip to help him understand. The text says that Philip proclaims the good news of Jesus to him. He shares all that he knows and has experienced of Jesus’ story. He helps the man to see how Jesus is the one spoken of by the prophet.

Inspired by what he learns, the man asks for Philip to baptize him in some water they are passing on the way. As the Ethiopian comes up from the water, the Spirit takes Philip away. Philip continues to preach the good news of Jesus throughout the region.

When we think of proclamation or proclaiming something, I think we tend to have a similar idea in mind to what we think of as witnessing. Looking up proclaim in a dictionary, we see that it means “to announce officially or publicly” or “to declare something one considers important.” I think this fits with the idea of the traveling evangelist or the public witness we often think of in regards to our faith. When we think of proclaiming our faith or proclaiming the good news, we think of going out on the street corner or holding up signs at sporting events or large gatherings to tell people what we think they should know.

And yet, that is not quite the meaning of either the words used in our text today, which we can perhaps tell by the context. Philip did not stand on the side of the road yelling out for all to hear. He did not confront the Ethiopian man with tirades about right and wrong or a sinful world in need of saving. 

While a public declaration may be our sense of proclamation, the Greek root translated as both preaching and proclaiming here is the root εὐαγγελίζω (euangelízō) which means to share good news. In fact, this word can be broken down further into the prefix, εὐ-, meaning good, and αγγελία (angelia), meaning message or news. Αγγελία is also the root of our word, angel, meaning messenger.

As we look at today’s story with this in mind, we perhaps begin to get a different picture of events. Rather than shouting what he thinks the Ethiopian should believe from the side of the road, Philip enters into a conversation with the man. Yes, he approaches the man, but he approaches him to open a dialogue. Philip was not told specifically what to say who appeared to him. The Spirit did not technically tell him to speak to the man. Philip was told first to be in a particular place, and once he had arrived, he was told to approach the carriage. He was not told to say any particular thing. It is only because he approached the man and opened a dialogue with him that he had the opportunity to share what he knew. He learned what the man was searching for and knew that he had the means to help him. Philip listened to the prompting of the Spirit and found himself right where he needed to be.

That sharing is the other important part of our story today. You see, the Ethiopian was already a person of some faith. We are told that he had been in Jerusalem to worship. But it seems he wanted to know even more. He was curious. It is not likely that an uninterested person would even have a scroll of the prophet Isaiah’s writings, much less that they would be reading them in an attempt to understand them. Even more than that, the Ethiopian man seemed to have a good grasp of what Isaiah was saying, at least on the surface. He knew that Isaiah was speaking of a suffering servant, perhaps even that he was speaking of the Messiah. What he sought to know was who that person was specifically. Was Isaiah referring to himself? Or was he talking about someone else?

This is the point at which our translation tells us that Philip proclaims the good news of Jesus to the man, but as I suggested, I think it is more accurate to say that Philip shared the good news with the man. The man already knew what the scripture said, but he was looking for more. Who specifically does the prophet refer to? Philip is able to tell him about Jesus and how Jesus is the one to whom Isaiah refers. He surely tells the man all he himself has learned from the other disciples and the apostles. Perhaps Philip been a follower of Jesus before his death. While we know the Apostles numbered twelve, there were numerous other disciples of Jesus who are not always individually named. It is quite possible Philip had been a follower of Jesus; perhaps had even been present at one of Jesus’ post-resurrection appearances considering some of those appearances simply mention that the disciples were present.

While we can't know that for certain, the story that Philip shared with the Ethiopian man was certainly heard as good news, so much so that the man asked to be baptized at the first sight of water. Philip gave context to the information that the man already had, helped him to see how Jesus is the one about whom the man was reading and wondering. Philip had his experience of Jesus to help him give context to the longing that the man appeared to have.

Augustine wrote of our hearts being restless until they find their rest in God. Blaise Pascal wrote about the empty imprint within us left by a memory of God, a space that cannot be satisfactorily filled by anything but God. There was even a song called “God-Shaped Hole” that came out in the late 90s that is about this very idea.

The Ethiopian man had a longing to understand, but he didn’t know all he needed to know. He didn’t have the knowledge that Philip had to help him fit everything into place. After opening a dialogue with the man and being asked to help him understand, Philip shared what he knew about Jesus. 

Today, Ethiopia has one of the oldest Christian traditions in the world. It all started with this chance meeting between Philip and the Ethiopian man traveling home. The fact this man was a eunuch and a court official for the queen means both that he was well-placed to share what he had learned as well as proof that God often chooses the people who might otherwise be rejected or overlooked as bearers of the message.

As we consider our modern world and what it means to proclaim or share the good news, what do we learn from this passage? What does it mean to follow the Spirit’s prompting? How might our world look different if entering into dialogue was our starting point?

How can we help give others the context and information they need to understand that divine longing within them?

Philip showed up in the right place and the right time because he followed the prompting of the Spirit. He didn’t know why he was there. He didn’t show up with a specific agenda. He showed up and listened to the man that he met along the way. He listened to his needs, his frustrations, his longing to understand, and then he shared what he had with the man in order to help him.

How does this help us understand proclamation better?

How does this help us see our calling to share the good news perhaps differently than we have before?

As we go forth today, may we realize that sometimes the Spirit sends us forth with very clear instructions, and sometimes, like Philip, we simply go where we are sent and figure out what people need after we get there.

In the Flesh: Loving

This week, we turn from the stories of Jesus' post-Resurrection appearances to his disciples to a look at how those appearances affected his disciples. After encountering Jesus in the flesh, the disciples were energized. They went forth to carry the message far and wide. Letters, like the one we read today, give us a glimpse into the message that they spread across the Empire and beyond (see 1 John 3:16-24).

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As you know, over the past few weeks, we have been focusing primarily on the post-Resurrection appearances of Jesus. We’ve heard the story of Mary Magdalene and Peter at the empty tomb and Jesus’ appearance to Mary, we touched on Jesus’ appearance to the disciples on the Emmaus road, heard that Jesus appeared to Peter, and then we’ve read two different version of Jesus’ first appearance to the gathered disciples.

One of the things we have noted is that these appearances of Jesus to the disciples has been an opportunity for Jesus to continue their teaching. Not only has he shown up to prove that he is in fact alive, he also reminds them of all the things he has taught them. And he has reinforced the key teachings that he wants them to remember above all others.

Last week, I pointed out how part of the reason for this is that Jesus is preparing them to go out and spread his teachings. After all, they are witnesses to all that Jesus has said and done. They are witnesses to his resurrection. He needs them to know what to focus on.

In fact, Jesus started this before his death on the cross. In the final week after he entered Jerusalem, his teaching took on a greater focus and intensity. He knew that his time with the disciples was drawing to a close. He tried to tell them. He tried to help them understand. They simply could not comprehend a Messiah who dies, a king who sacrifices himself.

At the last supper, he gives them a new commandment -- to love one another as he has loved them. When he appears to them again a few days later, even though he speaks of forgiveness and repentance, his disciples surely remembered that earlier teaching. When he tells them that they are witnesses who will go forth to tell others, everything they had heard from him is framed by these points -- love, forgiveness, and repentance.

In the last two weeks, we have touched briefly on what happened after the disciples had their post-resurrection encounters with Jesus. They spread the word of Jesus to the edges of the known world and beyond. While their ministry appears to have remained centered in Jerusalem with James as a key leader, other disciples went in other directions. We know that Thomas is said to have traveled east into parts of Asia, rumored to have traveled at least as far as India and perhaps farther. Matthew is rumored to have traveled to Ethiopia. Jude is recognized as having gone to Armenia. Peter traveled to Greece and some traditions hold that he traveled as far as Rome. Paul seems to have traveled throughout the Mediterranean, with letters written to communities he started in present-day Turkey, Greece, and Italy. There are some traditions that hold that he may have traveled as far as Spain. All of this because they had an experience of meeting Jesus in the flesh after his death. They were strengthened by their encounter with the resurrected Jesus.

Our letter today is attributed to the gospel writer we know as John, one of the original twelve apostles. For his part, tradition tells us that John spent the remainder of his ministry in the eastern Mediterranean. He appears to have been most revered in the western part of modern day Turkey, particularly in the region around Ephesus. Tradition also tells us that he was the only one of the Twelve to die of natural causes, living a long life in that region.

It is not difficult to see the commonalities between the writer of the letter we read from today and the gospel writer. In fact, the first verse of our reading today is nearly an analogue of John 3:16, a verse that so many of us know by heart. Our reading today seems to summarize that more famous verse: “This is how we know love: Jesus laid down his life for us…” (1 John 3:16a, CEB).

Immediately following this verse, the letter writer makes it clear what this means in action. He takes it beyond the realm of the abstract. We touched briefly last week on what the message was that the disciples spread as they went on their many journeys and travels to other places. Here we get to see that message.

Our writer first suggests that just as Jesus laid down his life for us, we ought to lay down our lives for each other. This for him is what it means to love each other. But he helpfully goes on to show that this isn’t only about sacrificing out physical bodies to death. Perhaps that is the ultimate example we see in Jesus, but through the rest of this section, we see that this is not the only way we might interpret laying down our lives for each other. If we have the means and see someone in need but refuse to help them, then we are not showing love to them. The love of God is not in us.

John goes on to say, “let’s not love with words or speech but with actions and truth” (1 John 3:18, CEB). He makes it clear that love is about more than thoughts and words; love is active. Don’t just say the words, but put the words into action.

It reminds me of a song in one of my wife’s favorite musicals. Now, I didn’t really grow up with many musicals, at least not unless it was an animated Disney film. But my wife loves musicals. As far as she is concerned, life should be like a musical, with people just randomly breaking into song as they go about their everyday business.

One of her favorite musicals is My Fair Lady. Maybe some of you are familiar with the story. A renowned linguist makes a bet that he can train a poor, unrefined woman from the streets of London into a lady fit to circulate in high society and even appear before the Queen. Toward the end of the story, a high class young man who has become enamored with the young woman professes his love with flowery imagery. Her response is to essentially sing that words are meaningless. “Don't talk of stars/Burning above/If you're in love/Show me.” Eliza doesn’t want to hear the words; she wants action. Let your actions speak for you.

Perhaps some of you have heard the quote attributed to Saint Francis of Assissi: “Preach the gospel daily, and if necessary use words.” It is the same idea our reading today suggests. Our actions speak the truth more loudly than any words we might use. 

Our reading continues with another reminder of the gospel writer by saying,” This is how we will know that we belong to the truth…” (1 John 3:19, CEB). This calls to mind Jesus’ new commandment for the disciples at the last supper. “This is how everyone will know that you are my disciples, when you love each other” (John 13:35, CEB). Making the connection even more explicit, the letter continues by saying, “This is his commandment, that we believe in the name of his Son, Jesus Christ, and love each other as he commanded us” (1 John 3:23, CEB).

John wants us to remember that the heart of Jesus’ ministry is love. He also wants to make it clear that this isn’t simply some cerebral love. This is not merely a profession of love. It is love put into action. It is love that is kind and caring, love that is compassionate and involved in meeting the needs of others. For John, this is what love looks like.

For those of us living in a modern world where we might speak of loving pizza or loving a particular movie with the same language we might use for the love of a friend or family member, this can be particularly convicting. There are of course ways in which the feelings or emotions may have similarities. Our preferences for one type of thing over another may be similar to our preference of a particular person over another. On the other hand, french fries, no matter how much we might love them, will never be able to comprehend our feelings or have any other thoughts about us. 

But the people in our lives and in the world around us can engage with us. And they will judge us on more than the words we use. If people are hurting, and we offer words of love without taking any action to ease their suffering, is that really love? If someone is in danger, and we offer them thoughts of well-being without doing anything to help them out of danger, have we shown them love?

In our modern world, the Church as a whole has gotten a certain reputation. Whether that reputation is deserved or not can be debated, but those who are not Christians base their understanding of the Church on the actions of those who are a part of it. When they see the Church saying that they promote love while at the same time acting in ways that show the opposite, what are people to believe? 

It reminds me of a joke I saw on Facebook one time. The story goes that a police officer pulls a car over and asks to see the man’s license and registration. After confirming that the man is in fact the owner of the car, the police officer apologizes, saying, “I noticed the fish emblem and the John 3:16 bumper sticker on your car. Then I saw you cutting people off, shouting out your window at other drivers, and making obscene gestures. I just assumed the car must have been stolen.”

While the Church may have a certain reputation, this doesn't mean that the Church is all bad. Over and over I have seen members  of many congregations put their words into action. I have seen members of the Church show love for their communities by supporting the most vulnerable. We, the Church in the world, have provided meals and gifts for those that might go without. We, the body of Christ, have offered physical and monetary support for our neighbors in need. We, believers, have shown our communities and our world that our love is more than words. I pray that no matter what the people who give the Church a bad reputation do, we will continue to be a living example of today’s text, that we can continue to be the loving presence of Jesus in our communities.