Friday, March 22, 2013

Week 5 of Lent

Day-to-day busy-ness, ACC basketball and March Madness marred my engagement with the actual photograph-taking for the Photo-a-Day challenge for Lent as we went through the fifth week, but taking time to catch up, at least on the reflection, if not the images, brought me into Scripture with greater attentiveness, so maybe that's ok.

Go
Am I as eager to go wherever God leads as my ball-chasing Labrador?



Temper 
"Do not be like a horse or a mule, without understanding, whose temper must be curbed with bit and bridle, else it will not stay near you.  Many are the torments of the wicked, but steadfast love surrounds those who trust in the LORD.  Be glad in the LORD and rejoice, O righteous, and shout for joy, all you upright in heart."
Psalm 32:9-11, NRSV
Surround
"…do not be afraid of them, and do not be afraid of their words, though briers and thorns surround you and you live among scorpions; do not be afraid of their words, and do not be dismayed at their looks, for they are a rebellious house. You shall speak my words to them, whether they hear or refuse to hear;..."
Ezekiel 2:6-, NRSV

New
How is the new thing that God is doing both fragile and life-bearing, and sometimes hidden from us?


Rise

"You shall love the LORD your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your might. Keep these words that I am commanding you today in your heart. Recite them to your children and talk about them when you are at home and when you are away, when you lie down and when you rise. Bind them as a sign on your hand, fix them as an emblem on your forehead, and write them on the doorposts of your house and on your gates."
Deuteronomy 6:5-9, NRSV

Dream
"…this is what was spoken through the prophet Joel: 17 'In the last days it will be, God declares, that I will pour out my Spirit upon all flesh, and your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, and your young men shall see visions, and your old men shall dream dreams. 18 Even upon my slaves, both men and women, in those days I will pour out my Spirit; and they shall prophesy."
Acts 2:16-18, NRSV

Beloved
"Do not worry about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God.And the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.Finally, beloved, whatever is true, whatever is honorable, whatever is just, whatever is pure, whatever is pleasing, whatever is commendable, if there is any excellence and if there is anything worthy of praise, think about these things." 

Philippians 4:6-8, NRSV
 

Sunday, March 17, 2013

Lessons from Mary of Bethany

Disclaimer: Because this is a sermon, it's longer than my typical blog post. For that matter, it's longer than my typical sermon, but it was really, really important to me that people hear that every one of us is a disciple, not just the seminary student, the pastor or the Sunday School teacher or college professor, and for that matter, not just the people sitting in the pews this morning.Christ died for us all and his death is triumphant over everything else. Let's risk our lives looking like that is true.

Who are Jesus’ disciples? How many are there?

Okay,…those are trick questions. The Gospel accounts of Jesus’ life and ministry tell us stories about the twelve who he gathered close to him, but every one of us is a disciple of Jesus.

Each of us is included in God’s infinite grace, love and forgiveness and
invited to follow Jesus and learn about the Kingdom of God,
invited to imitate his life in our relationships with one another,
invited to be in relationship with the hurting world around us..

The promise of the gospel is that discipleship is for everyone.

The story of the anointing of Jesus is in all four Gospel accounts; in Luke’s Gospel, it’s earlier in Jesus’ ministry but in three of the Gospels, including the Gospel of John that we read today, it is sandwiched between statements about killing Jesus and about killing Lazarus.[i] And only in John’s account, the anointing happens just before the story of Jesus entering Jerusalem that we will hear next week.

The story centers on just three people:
1)      Jesus, who has come from Ephraim, north of Jerusalem, where he had been with his disciples is now in Bethany, some two miles outside Jerusalem, at the house of Mary, Martha and their brother Lazarus whom Jesus raised from the dead. 
Ironically, that life-bringing event convinces the religious leaders in Jerusalem that Jesus must die and they begin to plot to kill him. But here, he is among friends.

2)      The second person is Mary of Bethany, who is loved by Jesus and believes in him;

3)      and third, there’s Judas, who is one of the twelve closest to Jesus, who is revealed as the ‘devil’, a thief and a betrayer.

Through her actions, Mary shows us what discipleship means – what it looks like to experience the fullness of life through believing in Jesus.

Unafraid of looking foolish,
Mary sits on the floor at Jesus’ feet, surrounded by a room full of people,
her hair is loosened and she is  pouring perfume on Jesus' feet,
filling the house with a scent that is something between mint and ginseng.

Unafraid of getting hurt,
Mary doesn’t stop to think what others will think. She doesn’t reason out the pros and cons, and evaluate whether she might be able to use the perfume another way. It is true that the perfume was so precious that its sale could have fed and clothed many – so no, this was not an efficient choice that maximized the possible returns, but in anointing Jesus’ feet, Mary makes a faithful choice, and shows her own vulnerability, and Jesus affirms her choice, telling the others, “Leave her alone.”

Unafraid of making others uncomfortable,
Mary makes an extravagant sacrifice, with an ease or willingness that makes at least one of the guests squirm. Have you ever shrunk back at an unconventional display or outpouring of faith, love or service?

We only hear his question about providing for the poor, but Lazarus sounds a lot like a sibling tattling on a brother or sister…. “Can you believe what she’s doing? What a waste, how foolish…” Mary wasn’t acting against Judas, she was acting faithfully toward Jesus.

Unafraid of consequences,
Mary carefully and intimately anoints Jesus,
honoring him as king and Messiah, and preparing his body for death on the cross.
She isn’t acting blindly. She knows what she’s doing. The resurrection of her brother Lazarus prompted the religious leaders to decide Jesus cannot live, and at the end of today’s Gospel, they decide Lazarus will need to die, too, because of his witness. But she takes the risk anyway, making her adoration and gratitude public.

Unafraid of conflict,
Mary speaks out, not with words, but with her actions, confident that she was acting faithfully.
How much easier would it have been for her to do something else, to help serve the meal, to stay on the periphery, and to let someone else be the model disciple?

Reflecting on this story of the anointing of Jesus, what are we afraid of?
What makes us more like Judas, and less like Mary?

 “Why are we so concerned with what other people think?”[ii]
How often do we hide our vulnerability, act with indifference or play the skeptic?[iii]
What happens when we let fear drive our decisions and actions?[iv]

We cheapen the cross.

Basically we say to God, and to those who see us as Christ in the world,
that Jesus’ death on the cross wasn’t enough,
that we don’t really believe that God’s love is sufficient to overcome our fears.

But on the cross, and in his resurrection, Jesus heals our brokenness, life overcomes death, and God’s grace, love and forgiveness are ours.

Not through any understanding or strength of our own,
Not because we don’t sound foolish,
Not because we play it safe,
Not because we don’t rock the boat,
Not because we don’t risk being chastised or criticized,
Not because we take the path of least resistance.

And you know what is even more radical?  God’s grace isn’t limited to the ones who get it right.

In a world that is quick to label and judge, Judas is clearly the un-redeemable villain. I’m not excusing his crime or his betrayal.

Clearly, he doesn’t get it. He doesn’t understand what Mary is doing.
Whether he is greedy and wants to steal the money for himself,
or whether he is merely self-conscious, he is turned in on himself,
and his own worries and questions,
instead of turning toward Jesus.

But discipleship is learning how to live in the grace of God despite our brokenness.[v]

Discipleship is for everyone,
regardless of what has broken us and our relationships.

God’s extravagant and abundant grace is for each one of us, for me and for you, redeeming and cleansing us from all unrighteousness.

The promise of the gospel is that discipleship is for everyone and watching Mary, we can see what it looks like.

It is Understanding Faith as a joyful relationship with God where we are invited to learn about the Kingdom of God.

It is Practicing Faith – in worship and outreach and learning and fellowship –
by living in relationship with each other and learning to imitate Jesus’ life in our own lives as best as we can.

It is Sharing Faith – through our lives with people inside this congregation and in our community – being with the hurting world around us and not being afraid to be vulnerable with others.

When we model our lives on the lives of people in Scripture like Mary of Bethany, we become living examples of Christ in the world, sharing God’s extravagant love with the world.


[i] Exegetical Notes by Brian Stoffregen
[ii] Rob Bell, NOOMA “Name”
[iii] Bill Blankschaen, “5 Reasons We Choose Not To Speak Up”, http://www.ronedmondson.com/2013/03/5-reasons-we-chose-to-not-speak-up.html (accessed March 14, 2013).
[iv] ibid
[v] Mike Breen, Building a Discipling Culture, Chapter 1

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Week 4 of Lent

Some days, it feels like Lent is flying by and we'll be at Palm Sunday, Holy Week and Easter in the blink of an eye. (insert banned A word here) Other days, the long hours stretch interminably and it feels like we will remain in the dark woods forever.

Shadow 

No
Jesus' "no" becomes our "no." From Daniel Erlander's "Baptized We Live"



Find
How can we make it easier for people to "find" their way through and follow our liturgy?


Faithful 
What symbols do we use to show how we are "faithful" or tell Christ's story?
 

Ate
What is my daily bread? How much is enough? And whose bowls are empty? How do I share?
 

Happy 
No single image could capture happiness for me, but the folks at Rethink Church included this version of Psalm 32:1-2 The Message on its blog for "happy".
 
Count yourself lucky, how happy you must be—
you get a fresh start,
your slate’s wiped clean.
Count yourself lucky—
God holds nothing against you
and you’re holding nothing back from God. 


Silence
One image that came to mind for silence is from the woods, specifically, from being on the Appalachian Trail in Harpers Ferry for the first time on President's Day in 2001. But even the woods are not silent. We hear the rhythm of our breath, which John Wesley described as prayer.  God breathes into us the divine word and will; we respond in prayer by breathing out our responses in both word and deed.

Water
Martin Luther writes in the Small Catechism, "Baptism is not simply plain water. It is water enclosed in God's command & connected w/ God's Word."

 

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Week 3 of Lent

As we move into the second half of Lent, have you discovered practices, prayers or disciplines that have opened your eyes to seeing God in the world around you? Have you changed how you approach God yourself? What have you been learning?

I have discovered that while I use a rich vocabulary of words in much of what I do, sometimes I live in a visual desert, or at least, its distinctiveness is blurred in its familiarity. I wonder how my reflections would change if I lived in  more urban setting, or if I was in more varied spaces every day instead of following my routine of home, desk, sanctuary, highway and home again. And then I find myself convicted: Living in the midst of the familiar (and the comfortable), how much more important is it then that I stop and pay attention to the world around me, to notice where I see God active and vibrant?

Hear

The organ resonates, the trumpets call, the choral voices are raised singing, "Hosanna!"



Earthly
"If God so clothes..." all kinds of "earthly" things, will God not also clothe us? (Mt. 6:30)


Prophet
Who are our "prophets" today? Martin Luther King, Jr. certainly has been named. Mother Theresa probably, too. Theologian Walter Brueggemann writes about prophetic imagination and how we preachers can speak prophetically when we bring the Word to our congregations. I wrestled with an image for this word because I resisted using the image of someone renowned, and kept wondering, "Who are the prophets in my life?" and "What does it mean to be a prophet today?" What are the hard truths we need to hear?

Leave
The story of Jesus delivering a boy from a demon in Luke 9:35-43 is the Scripture the folks at Rethink Church chose for this word. The disciples and Jesus had just left a mountaintop experience, and confronted by the world waiting for them, Jesus drove out the evil. What do we leave when we go out of our sanctuaries? Are we able, on the strength of our witness, to drive out, or expel, evil from our communities? Is that the power of communion, community bound together by Christ?

Thirst
Is our "thirst" for God felt more keenly than our craving for the next cup of dark roast?




Bless
"Bless, O Lord, this food to our use and us to Thy loving service." That was my childhood table grace, and it's one of one hundred graces in this volume, which a seminary friend shared with me several years ago.



Night
Remembering that even in the darkness, God is here with me, with us.

Friday, March 1, 2013

Week 2 of Lent

Week 2 of the "Photo-a-Day" challenge created by Rethink Church challenged us to look at these words:

Evil
Defined for many by the events of September 11, 2001, evil was made visible in the events of that day, as well as others before it and since, whenever we have cried "never again". This photo is from TIME Pictures:


Love
While, undoubtedly, the context for speaking of love during Lent is the inexhaustible love of God for us, the picture was what still comes to mind first for me: one from our wedding day in 1993.


Spirit
The Spirit of God is ever in the wind or the whisper. Many images I saw on the day of this word were of cemeteries, recalling the spirits of all the saints who have gone before us. This glass sculpture was in my grandparents' dining room during their lifetimes, and if you squint, you can almost see the branches sway.


Live
Daily, we're reminded to live life fully because it is a gift. With my family, I try to live with laughter and joy.


Cover
Last Sunday's Gospel text (Luke 13:31-35) spoke of the mother hen covering her brood, protecting them from the assault of the world around them. This image is from a chapel above Jerusalem that tradition says is where Jesus proclaimed his lament over the city. (Mt. 23:37)


For the rest of the week's reflections on "Vision" and "Lift", I have to rely on the Pinterest images collected by the folks at Rethink Church. The daily text and blog post give a short introduction to where they've drawn the word from, and sometimes, I read that before I find an image, while other times, I don't read it until later, and it's fun to see where our thoughts diverged.

What are you seeing differently this Lent?