Sunday, September 8, 2024

“Things Might Get a Little Messy” a sermon on Mark 7:24-37

Mark 7:24-37
“Things Might Get a Little Messy”
Preached Sunday, September 8, 2024

This morning is a joy as we have a critical mass of our children here and blessed them and their backpacks, prayed for them, gave out Bibles… And, if I’m being honest, it was just slightly chaotic, right?

This whole week I have been on edge about this morning - mainly, will I make it to Sunday morning? I am almost 39 weeks pregnant, 4 days away from scheduled surgery to have this child, and having regular contractions. I kept on asking myself - will I really make it to Sunday? My assurance to myself was - it will be okay, even if I don’t. Sure, it might be a little more chaotic…but our DS Edgar or a gifted lay person would be more than capable of managing the chaos…I mean, leading worship and making it through the children’s moment activities. I did leave notes for someone else - just in case.

But let’s be honest - life with children - whether that’s birth, parenthood, grandparenthood, aunt and uncle-hood, or church life and ministry with children - life with children is going to be a little messy. Life is messy - period. Life with children…well, I wish I could go back and see how clean my house was 4 years ago.

And - that’s okay. Jesus calls us, invites us, into the mess.

As United Methodists, we tend to like things nice and clean. Just look around our gorgeous sanctuary and church! Our founder, John Wesley, was very meticulous. He was an extremely neat and orderly person. He kept a detailed journal down even to the minute. Some scholars have speculated on whether Wesley had OCD tendencies - although we should always be careful about diagnosing historical figures. But there was no doubt he liked things orderly…but that didn’t keep him from wading into the mess of ministry.

He said he “submitted himself to be more vile” when he transitioned to outdoor preaching - a venue that at the time was considered scandalous if not sinful but was the most effective way of reaching the masses.
He preached in mines and to miners - and I’m sure in the process got some dust on him.
He visited the prisons and the poor houses.
He preached against the slave trade in areas where there was still strong support for it - getting items thrown at him and narrowly escaped being tared and feathered.

For a man who liked things in a certain way - there is a reason we are called “Methodists” because of John Wesley’s meticulous methods for spiritual growth - but for a man who liked things a certain way, he certainly was still willing to wade into the mess of ministry.

And it is into the mess of ministry that we too are called - and today especially, on our “Kick-Off” Sunday, we are going to talk about the mess of ministry, focusing on the mess of ministry with children.

As we raise our children and grandchildren - and as the whole congregation raises children - after all, in our baptismal vows we are all accountable to raising and loving all the children in our midst and our congregation. Raising children to know God and to know that God loves them - the responsibility does not fall solely on their direct caregivers. Although there is responsibility there. The whole congregation vows before each other and God to take that on for themselves as well.

And this can look like a lot of different things:
It can look like celebrating every time a family shows up in church instead of shaming them for the times they couldn’t get here.
It looks like volunteering for our children’s ministry if that is a spiritual gift you have.
It looks like supporting budgets and staffing positions that help us minister to children and their families.
It looks like celebrating, appreciating, and even giving thanks to God for the noises and motions of children in worship - because that means children are here.
It looks like agreeing to commit to walking with children in their journey of discipleship just as you walk with those who are in your same season of life.
It looks like looking for ways to become the village and support systems that so many young families lack these days.
It looks like flexibility and changes in the way “things have always been done” to make room for the present of the way things are and the future of how things could be.
It may even look like personal sacrifice, putting aside your own desires and preferences, to put the desires, preferences, and needs of children and young families before your own.
And it can look like so many different ways - as many ways as there are people and their unique spiritual gifts

We are called to help raise children of God. We raise them to claim the faith of Jesus. We raise them to show no partiality to others, as our Scripture from James says today. We raise them to love all like Jesus loves. We raise them to follow Scriptures, like Matthew 25 and our reading from James today - to make Scripture come alive through care and love for others. We raise them that their faith may be alive and not dead - for good works to accompany their faith.

And as we do all this…Things might get a little messy.

Things are already getting a little messy over here at Boardman UMC - and that’s EXCITING.

Our volunteers have been working tirelessly to create dedicated spaces for children’s ministry here at BUMC. Spaces that are for use for our children on Sunday mornings. And there was some literal, physical mess accompanying that - although we had to clean up some dirt mess instead to make a good productive mess of new paint and waxing floors and moving furniture. Right now we’re going to be “under renovation” for at least a year. We are making usable dedicated spaces now - with the hope that over the next year, with congregational wide support as part of a capital campaign, we can make the rooms fully what we dream them to be. The same with a dream and a vision for a pray-ground space in our sanctuary for our youngest children and their caregivers who prefer to stay in worship together. We are also working on a dedicated nursery and preschool aged space for Sunday mornings - with the hope that we can start offering childcare on Sunday mornings for those 4 and under and allowing 5 and up to be in Sunday School. And with the hope that we will start offering that childcare every Sunday morning by the end of this month! We have a new curriculum we’re starting today. We have new staff as Miss Allison and Miss LaToya starting a new position. We have new volunteers - did you know over the last year we went from having zero Sunday School volunteers to now we have over a dozen background checked and Safe Sanctuary certified volunteers? Friends, this is HUGE. And worth celebrating.

And up to this point…none of this has been super clean. There have been to-do lists and lots and lots and lots of conversations. And having people willing to jump in and figure it out as we go along. And people willing to jump in and paint ceiling tiles and move furniture down three flights of steps and so much more. We’ve started welcoming and embracing the mess. And there will be more mess to come - not just the room renovations but the mess that comes from raising children who know God loves them unconditionally. And that’s such a GOOD thing.

We’ll get back to this a little… And I want to reassure you that messiness is just part of the reality of following Jesus and our Gospel reading from today is a great example of that. We actually have two very messy stories in our 13 verses today.

At first we have the dialogue with the Syrophencian woman and the healing of her child. Some background on this that wouldn’t be obvious to us as modern readers.

This passage starts “From there he set out and went away to the region of Tyre.” Tyre was “gentile territory” - it was considered “outside the realm of Jesus’s ministry.” And it was not a region - both area and people - that was looked on favorably by the disciples of Jesus. It would have been on the other side of the fence, the wrong side of the tracks - and all the prejudices that come with that.

And it is there that a woman starts begging Jesus. In this same story in Matthew, she is called a Canaanite woman. Now, Matthew, right away, by singling out this woman as a Canaanite is communicating that she is not only an outsider but the enemy. In the time of Jesus, Canaanite was already an outdated term to describe someone. Theologians and preachers talking about this text often refer to her as the Syrophoenician woman - a term describing where she was from, her ethnicity. But probably of Canaanite descent. And the Canaanites were the historic and well-known enemy of the Hebrew people - but it wasn’t really used to describe people living in Jesus’s day…unless perhaps someone wanted to clearly mark someone as not only an outsider, but the worst of the outsiders. One of them. And the Syrophoenicians, the Canaanites, let’s just say that there were a lot of religious, ethnic, and racial stereotypes about them. Bigotry against them by the Israelites was well-known and often played a role in every interaction between an Israelite and a Canaanite.

And this interaction gets messy. There is begging, there is…perhaps some testiness from Jesus. There is a lot of tension. This could have gone very badly for this mother, so desperate for her child to be healed. The onlookers likely watched this interaction play out with held breath - things were about to get messy…

But things didn’t get messy in the way many of them expected. Things got messy not because this interaction escalated into violence or shaming or even more of a public spectacle - as it very well could have. Things got messy BECAUSE Jesus healed her daughter.

Things got messy because Jesus just erased the line separating “us” and “them.” It got messy because Jesus just threw out all the perimeters and barriers of who he came to heal and minister to. It gets messy because Jesus just widened the circle of who he was in ministry with. We like our neat and comfortable boxes. We like our lines separating us and them. We like borders. And Jesus, in this act of healing, threw out the boxes, erased distinctions of us versus them, and ignored all human-made boundaries. This is something we continue to see Jesus do as he progresses in his ministry and something we definitely see the Spirit do in many interactions with the early church - willfully and joyfully stepping into the mess of ministry because the mess means more people, more diverse people, are welcomed into the family of God.

This story of Jesus embracing the mess of ministry is then followed by another messy healing - one this is way more obvious to us as being messy. Because it involves bodily fluids. The epitome of messiness. Jesus meets a deaf man with a speech impediment and he puts his fingers in his ears, spits, and touches his tongue. First of all, I am very against people touching my tongue? Just putting it out there. That’s not a socially acceptable thing to do, really - then or now. And I kept on trying to do research…where did Jesus spit? Did Jesus…spit on the ground, spit on his hand, spit…into the man’s mouth??? Uh…either way, things got physically messy in this healing.

Both healings were messy in different ways…because ministry is messy. Life is messy. Sometimes the mess is metaphorical, less definitive, the chaotic mess of interpersonal relationships and welcoming all sorts of people with all sorts of backgrounds and all sorts of needs into the church - and sometimes we can see the mess with our eyes. Spit. Or wet paint on walls. Or crumbs from communion bread on the ground. Mess is an inherent part of following Jesus.

We as a church have expressed the desire to expand and reach new people, younger people, and be in ministry to and with young families. We may not realize this…but if we have this desire, then we also need to accept the NEED for, the reality that, things are gonna get a little messy.

Our children and grandchildren, the children we raise in our community, may take the faith in directions we didn’t anticipate or expect, like Jesus did with the Syrophencian woman. They may take their faith and how they live it out into directions that previous generations aren’t ready for - that we aren’t ready for. That’s a kind of mess…but a good, beautiful, and holy mess. If they are expanding the faith out of love of God and love of neighbor - making their faith come alive - we are called to welcome the mess - invite it in - let the children lead the way.

A commitment to young families and kids always sounds good on paper - it’s what every church “wants.” But not every church is willing, ready, or able to accept the mess that comes with it. I think we are ready, or getting there, as Boardman UMC. The reality is messy - (giving birth is MESSY) and that’s what we’re doing, really - giving birth to a new thing - to reach a new generation with God’s love.

It’s messy. And it’s also all beautiful - and filled with love.

So friends, my prayer for us, my exhortation, my blessing for us is this: Let’s live into the mess, the beauty, and the love of teaching children about God’s love for them.

Amen.

Tuesday, September 3, 2024

Popular Hymns Service

Popular Hymns Service

A note on this service: for several Sundays before this service, I solicited favorite hymns from the congregation. Every hymn in this order of worship was a congregant's favorite hymn. For four of the hymns I shared a reflection. Worship leaders/planners are welcome to use the descriptions/reflections of the hymns I wrote or be inspired to do likewise for a popular hymns service in their settings of worship.

Prelude
Introit
Welcome & Greeting

*Call to Worship, Methodists as a Singing People (See UMH vii for reference)


L: As Methodists, we have been called “A Singing People”
P: We love singing praises to God - it warm our hearts,
L: In his Directions for Singing, found in the United Methodist hymnal, John Wesley encourages us to learn the hymns in the hymnal before all other songs.
P: He says that we should all sing together as frequently as we can! That even for those who find it a cross to bear, singing will be a blessing.
L: He says we should sing lustily and with good courage and to beware of singing as if we were half dead or half asleep.
P: We lift up our voices in strength! We strive to unite our voices together to make one clear melodious sound to God.
L: We sing together: hymns that we love, clearly and melodiously, with strength and modesty, in time and in tune - an act of fellowship and worship.
P: But above all we sing spiritually, with an eye to God for every word we sing.
L: Today as we sing and learn, may we worshipfully and continually offer our hearts to God.
P: We sing today and every day until that time when we sing before the throne of God.
All: Let us worship God in song! Amen!

*Hymn
Amazing Grace, vs. 1, 2, 5, 6, UMH 378

Children’s Song
What a Friend We Have in Jesus. Vs. 1, UMH 526

Children’s Moment

Responsive Psalm with Sung Response

Psalm 95 (Response 2), UMH 814

Congregational Hymn Sing

    Reflections on How Great Thou Art

The origins of How Great Thou Art start with Swedish pastor Carl Boberg around 1886. Boberg was walking along the Swedish coast when he got caught in a thunderstorm. It was a violent storm but as it dissipated, the sun peeked through the clouds and the birds once again started singing. The immense beauty of it startled Boberg and caused him to fall to his knees in awe…and he penned nine stanzas in Swedish that would eventually become the hymn we know today. Although from here, the poem started taking on a life of its own, being translated, tweaked and added to in a variety of languages. English missionary Stuart K. Hine and his wife first heard the song sung in Russian while in Ukraine. When they returned to England in the “Blitz years” they used the hymn in evangeletic measures and added the fourth verse - about Christ coming in final victory - at the end of the war.

The hymn grew immensely in popularity in The United States when it was used as part of the Billy Graham Crusades, starting in 1955. This sky rocketed it, perhaps the most popular hymn of all time in The United States, with it garnering immense radio play and covers by a wide range of artists, including Elvis Presley. And interesting enough, it also made it the most expensive hymn to include in our current United Methodist hymnal with just the copyright to use this hymn costing $2,000.

And still, perhaps the reason this hymn has captured the hearts and voices of Christians across the world and over many years, is because so many of us have experienced what Boberg felt on the coast of Sweden: an overwhelming appreciation of God’s beauty and wonder found in Creation and the urge to sing out praises to our God and Maker.

The first two verses focus on just this: God’s wonder and beauty found in our created world. The third reminds us of how great God is - not just in the natural world, but through the salvific acts of Jesus Christ. And lastly, the fourth verse takes on an eschatological nature - reminding us of the day when Christ will save not just humanity but all of God’s beautiful creation.

And so as we sing out together this morning, let us praise God and proclaim “My God, how great thou art!”

How Great Thou Art, UMH 77

    Reflections on The Old Rugged Cross

Based on the responses we collected over several weeks, this was the most popular favorite hymn of our congregation - the most requested for today. George Bennard was born in Ohio in 1873 and he later became a Methodist evangelist. The finished version of the hymn was first performed at a revival meeting in 1913.

The hymn grew in popularity when Billy Sunday used it as part of his evangelistic efforts and his chief musician bought the copyright. “The Old Rugged Cross” was performed by many artists, especially country artists including: Ernest Tubb, Andy Griffith, Jim Reeves, Johnny Cash and June Carter, Patsy Cline, Merle Haggard, Loretta Lynn, Tennessee Ernie Ford, and Willie Nelson. Mahalia Jackson covered it in an album of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s most beloved hymns. And like “How Great Thou Art” it was a staple of Billy Graham’s crusades.

The similarities in timeline and popularity of both “The Old Rugged Cross” and “How Great Thou Art” reflect the timeline in which many of us, or our parents or our grandparents who we learned the faith from - the timeline that we and they came to know Christ and the years in which their faith was formed. Both hymns are ubiquitous with the American Christian landscape of the 50’s and 60’s.

But more than that, it’s not just the radio, TV, or revival air time that has made this hymn capture our hearts - it’s that poetically painted picture of The Old Rugged Cross and what it means to us and our faith.

This hymn employs the poetic use of paradox - something cherished, and yet old and rugged. An emblem of suffering and shame, and yet where the dearest and best hung. Despised by the world, yet holding an attraction for me. It reminds us of not only Jesus’s deep love beheld in his incarnation and death for us - but how what we cherish as Christians, including that old rugged cross, might seem strange to the world. This is what Paul calls “the scandal of the cross” - that something that was meant to be seen as an instrument of death and empire, could be transformed into a symbol of love and life and salvation.

And so, let us cherish the cross and all it represents as we sing.

The Old Rugged Cross, vs. 1, 2, 4, UMH 504

    Reflections on Because He Lives

It is fitting that after we sing a hymn meditating on the events of Good Friday that we turn to Easter and singing of Christ’s resurrection. Because He Lives is based on John 14:19—“because I live, you also will live.”

The hymn was written by the married couple, Gloria and William Gather in 1971. The two of them wrote this about the background behind the hymn:

“‘Because he lives’ was written in the midst of social upheaval, threats of war, and betrayals of national and personal trust. It was into this world at such a time that we were bringing our third little baby. Assassinations, drug traffic, and war monopolized the headlines. It was in the midst of this kind of uncertainty that the assurance of the Lordship of the risen Christ blew across our troubled minds like a cooling breeze in the parched desert. Holding our tiny son in our arms we were able to write:

‘How sweet to hold our newborn baby,
And feel the pride, and joy he gives;
But greater still the calm assurance,
this child can face uncertain day because He lives.’”

The world that the Gathers describe that caused them to search for the hope of Jesus in this song - it does not sound too unlike the world we live in today. We live in the midst of social and political upheaval, war and threats of war, and violence of all kinds. How we, too, long for a balm that feels like a cool breeze in a parched desert.

When we sing this hymn, when we sing a hymn of resurrection, we are offered just that. We are reminded of the day when peace shall reign, when all wars and violence will cease, and Christ conquers all of death.

Let us turn to this song and sing it with the gusto of Easter morning, of empty tombs, and hope for our world and souls.

Because He Lives, UMH 364

    Reflections on Let There Be Peace on Earth

Like Because He Lives, Let There Be Peace on Earth was also written by a married couple, Sy Miller and Jill Jackson-Miller. In a radio interview, Jill gave this background for this hymn:

“When I attempted suicide [in 1944] and I didn’t succeed,” she said, “I knew for the first time unconditional love—which God is. You are totally loved, totally accepted, just the way you are. In that moment I was not allowed to die, and something happened to me, which is very difficult to explain. I had an eternal moment of truth, in which I knew I was loved, and I knew I was here for a purpose.”

Jill spent the next decade exploring her relationship with God and God’s purpose for her. 11 years after her suidice attempt, she penned the words to “Let There Be Peace on Earth.” Jill had found her purpose for which God had saved her: to help create peace on earth.

The song was introduced at a workshop in 1955 - this workshop was comprised of 180 teenagers of all different religions and races - maybe not so strange for us in 2024 but remember, this was 1955. And in singing the song together, walls and barriers were broken down.

Sy Miller shared about this hymns impact: “One summer evening in 1955, a group of 180 teenagers of all races and religions, meeting at a workshop high in the California mountains locked arms, formed a circle and sang a song of peace. They felt that singing the song, with its simple basic sentiment—‘Let there be peace on earth and let it begin with me’—helped to create a climate for world peace and understanding.

…When they came down from the mountain, these inspired young people brought the song with them and started sharing it. And, as though on wings, ‘Let There Be Peace on Earth’ began an amazing journey around the globe. It traveled first, of course, with the young campers back to their homes and schools, churches and clubs.”

The hymn then grew, not just to be sung at workshops and churches but at school graduations, PTA meetings, Kiwanis Clubs, 4-H Clubs…and many more. It was sung on Sundays as well as on Veterans Day, Human Rights Day and United Nations Day.

For me, this song was even sung as a bedtime lullaby.

This song was born out of the deep love God has for us - that then calls us and transforms us to be agents of peace in this world. Disciples of the Prince of Peace. As we sing this favorite hymn today, may we feel the love Christ has for us and be compelled to share Christ’s love and peace with the world.

Let There Be Peace on Earth, UMH 431

Pastoral Prayer

Offertory Prayer
Offertory with Anthem
Doxology

Invitation to the Table, UMH 12
Prayer of Confession & Words of Assurance
Passing of the Peace

Hymn of Invitation

Let All Mortal Flesh Keep Silence, vs. 1,2, 4, UMH 626

The Great Thanksgiving, UMH 13
Holy Communion

Prayer After Receiving

*Closing Hymn

Lord of the Dance, vs. 1, 3, 4, 5, UMH 261

*Benediction

Monday, August 26, 2024

“The Armor of God - doG fo romrA ehT” a sermon on Ephesians 6:10-20

Ephesians 6:10-20
“The Armor of God - doG fo romrA ehT”
Preached August 25, 2024

I am going to start my sermon today by referencing a song that I will be SHOCKED if you have ever heard this song referenced in a sermon or even in church before. And that’s rap star Missy Elliot’s 2002 hit “Work It.” To be clear, I don’t actually recommend listening to this song - no wholesome message will be found. But it was the inspiration for today’s sermon title.

The chorus to this song - and I’m going to do my best to say this, I had to listen to this several times to prep myself. The chorus goes:

“Is it worth it? Let me work it
I put my thing down, flip it and reverse it
Ti esrever dna ti pilf nwod gnaht ym tup i
Ti esrever dna ti pilf nwod gnaht ym tup i”

Now, you might be wondering - what in goodness did Pastor Allison just say?? What were those last two lines? “Ti esrever dna ti pilf nwod gnaht ym tup i. Ti esrever dna ti pilf nwod gnaht ym tup i.”

It’s literally “I put my thing down, flip it, and reverse it” - flipped and reversed. I know back in the day, people were worried about hidden messages in records when played backwards. If you were to put this song on a record, play it backwards, those two lines would make sense!

And that’s what I did with today’s sermon title but instead of with rap lyrics, with “The Armor of God.” I flipped it and reversed it because that’s, in part, what is happening in today’s reading from Ephesians. The writer of Ephesians is taking a well-known, ubiquitous symbol - that of the Roman soldier in their armor, flipping it, and reversing it - to claim meaning against the accepted cultural meaning. To claim associations against the culture associations made with the Roman soldier in their full armor.

While today, for many people, especially in America, the image of the American soldier, in their uniform or in combat gear, fills many with patriotic pride and gratitude for service and sacrifices made. It can be much, much more complicated than that, of course. And that patriotic sense and gratitude would not have been the reaction early Christians would have had to a Roman soldier.

The Roman Empire was seen as an aggressor and oppressor. Soldiers were the tools of that aggression and oppression of which the Jewish people, and the early sect of Christianity that came from Judaism, and even the poor and those not in power - would have seen as the enemy. Remember that it was the Roman soldiers who arrested Jesus, who hung him on the cross, who pierced his side with a spear. And I am sure that the crucifixion of Jesus was not the only violent act that many living in this time would have seen committed by the hands of a soldier in armor. Indeed, many early Christians were pacifists and would not even baptize a soldier unless they renounced their profession.

Given our current view as a wider American culture that tends to celebrate and glorify the military - which I’m not making a judgment on today, that’s a whole other sermon - I’m just stating it as a fact. We often miss the subversive undertones, the flipping and reversing of the image of the soldier and armor that is happening in this passage.

When reading this passage we often focus on the familiar imagery: the armor. The belt, breastplate, shield, helmet, and sword. I remember a little shield and sword I bought as a kid at the Christian bookstore labeled “armor of God.” It’s one of those verses that even children are familiar with. Yet when we focus on the armor, the weaponry, the warfare aspects of this passage, it has the ability to turn into a physically violent message -- which was exactly what the writer of Ephesians was trying to subvert, to flip and reverse, to change a violent image into a spiritual one. Because we do know that too much violence has been done in the name of God, both in Christianity and in other religions. The Crusades, the Holocaust, the KKK and even the current resurgence of White Supremacists and Nazis -- all called upon the Christian soldier, the name of God, in order to try and make their violence sacred.

The writer of Ephesians couldn’t have known the lasting impact and effect using this imagery would have...if he did, I suspect that maybe he would have found a different image to use. But he did use this language for a specific reason. He took the image of the armor of a soldier and flipped it and reversed it- and its implied meaning - around. Due to Roman Imperialization, everyone was familiar with the Roman soldier. The writer used this to his advantage and co-opted the symbol and imagery not to promote, as the Empire did, a gospel of war but to promote a gospel of peace instead. This scripture promotes a contrary message against the power and violence of empire...while using the empire’s language -- this was a subversive act! Taking an image of the state that represents violence, war, and domination and turning it on its head to represent peace and truth - was and is radical. It probably upset just as many people then as it does now.

Just as the writer flipped the imagery of armor for those in Ephesus - it can be flipped for us today. What if instead of focusing on “armor, belt, helmet, shield, sword” - symbols which continue to be symbols of violence, power, and empire - we instead focused on “truth, righteousness, gospel of peace, faith, salvation, and the Spirit.” After all the writer said this was not a battle of flesh and blood, so let’s put the armor aside and focus on the Gospel message, the Good News, that the writer compels us to clothe ourselves with - righteousness, truth, peace.

Early Christianity and followers of Jesus were no strangers to flipping society’s messages or cultural norms inside out. For example the names used for Jesus - Prince of Peace, Lord of Lords, King of Kings - these were all titles for Caesar. They co-opted the language of the empire and instead of using it to dominate and oppress - subscribed it to Jesus, the one who releases the captives.

Even the fact that today Christians claim the symbol of the cross as our symbol is perhaps the biggest subversive flipping and reversing of an image. The cross was nothing less than an instrument of death and torture used by the Empire to control. It was reserved to be the means of death for those who threatened the empire. Indeed the robbers or bandits crucified on either side of Jesus were not there for stealing food or money, they were there for being part of a political sect that planned revolution against Caesar. Jesus’s message, and the names he called himself and was called, King of the Jews, Son of Man…these were seen as political acts against the power and violence of the Empire and so he was sentenced to death on a cross. Early Christians used the symbol of the fish, not the cross, because it was still seen too much as a symbol of death. I have heard it equated to using the electric chair, a noose, or even a lethal injection as a symbol of life - completely antithetical to how we think of it. But because of the Resurrection, Christians were able to flip and reverse the image of the cross, subvert it, take it from a symbol of death and make it a symbol of life. This is powerful and perhaps the biggest subversion of all.

Jesus himself flipped society’s expectations on their heads. He said the first shall be last and the poor shall be rich. Jesus’s own life and death shattered the world’s expectations and preconceived notions of power. The idea that God would lower God’s self to human form, live among us, and die on a cross flips every expectation of divinity. Sometimes we forget to realize exactly how radical this all is.

So what does this radical, subversive message mean for the modern Christian church in America? What would it look like for us today to flip the culture’s language and societally regulated norms on their heads as we proclaim the Gospel of peace with truth and righteousness? Perhaps it would mean supporting and listening to minority and marginalized voices when they are telling us they are oppressed. Instead of saying “not all men” or “not all white people” or denying their claims - what would it look like to really take to heart claims of oppression from the margins? Perhaps it would mean cultivating a culture of radical generosity in a failing economy. And we’re not just talking about money but time, gifts, and services. In a culture that says that the only thing more valuable than money is time productively spent making money, what would it look like to give of ourselves to promoting the gospel of peace wherever we may find ourselves? What does it look like to promote and live a gospel of peace here at Boardman United Methodist Church, as a community and individuals? It looks like feeding the hungry, clothing the naked, caring for the last and the least, loving God, and loving one another.

What does clothing ourselves with The Gospel of Peace look like? With the Spirit’s help it will look like truth, righteousness, faith, and salvation.

My friends, this is not an easy message. It is much easier to arm ourselves in the violence of the so-called armor of God and go out into the world looking out for mine and my own, the empire and its interests, ignoring the radical, subversive world-changing message that Ephesians 6:10-20 has to offer us.

So friends, equip yourself with truth, righteousness, the gospel of peace, faith, salvation and the Spirit so that we may go out into the world, flip it and reverse it, subverting the messages of death and violence wherever we may find them - and there are lots of those messages out there - and instead turning them into message of life - and the ultimate eternal life in Jesus Christ.

Amen.

Monday, August 19, 2024

"You Are What You Eat" a sermon on John 6:51-58

John 6:51-58
“You Are What You Eat”
Preached August 18, 2024

How many of you are familiar with the sugary fruit snack Gushers? As a kid I wasn’t allowed to eat these and because I was six years old and had the reasoning ability to match, I thought it was because of the commercials. The Gusher commercials always showed cool looking kids eating Gushers...and then their heads changing into the fruit of whatever flavor Gusher they were eating. As a young kid I thought...does that really happen? Would my head turn colors when I eat Gushers? Is THAT why my parents won’t let me eat them? It only took a few more years, and a disappointing first Gushers experience at a friend’s house, to realize that no, Gushers wouldn’t turn my head fun colors or fruit shapes. My parents probably didn’t want me eating them because of the 10 grams of sugar and food coloring in every package - and they were a little pricey.

But as a young child, these commercials made my brain take the idea of, “You are what you eat” quite seriously. Did any of you ever hear this phrase going up? Show of hands? Yeah? As a kid I thought it was a stupid reason not to eat Gushers and an even lamer reason to have to eat those three green beans on my plate before I was allowed to leave the table. “You are what you eat” my parents would tell me as I pushed my vegetables around my plate with a fork... But as I have gotten older, and have been working on re-learning the skill of listening to my body, I have been thinking more about the term, “You are what you eat” - in terms of what foods give me the most energy, are good for my body, or even bring me joy, sugar count taken into consideration or not.

So today I’d like us to take into serious consideration the phrase, “You are what you eat” in relation to the Eucharist, the meal of bread and juice that we share together on Sundays at our altar table. What does it mean to eat this bread, to eat the body of Christ? What does it mean to share this cup, to drink the blood of Christ? And what effect does it have on us, those who consume it, those who become what we eat?

As we begin to examine this question, let’s start by looking at the Scripture. Remember, this is now at the third Sunday we’ve heard Jesus talk about bread - I preached on bread twice, we had a guest preacher, and now we’re back to bread again. This is part of a multi-week Bread of Life discourse in the Revised Common Lectionary. It all started with Jesus feeding the crowds, multiplying loaves of bread and fish to feed the 5,000. And from there the crowds followed him, wanting more bread. Jesus told them to look not for food that perishes but food that endures for eternal life. They talked about manna, the bread that God sent from heaven to feed the Israelites in the desert, and Jesus claimed that he is the bread of life and those who come to him will never be hungry or thirsty. But this wasn’t necessarily an easy concept to grasp so the conversation continued. There were those who asked how Jesus, a normal man, could claim these things about himself? Once again, Jesus answers, “I am the living bread that came down from heaven. Whoever eats of this bread will live forever; and the bread that I will give for the life of the world is my flesh.” And the response to this statement from the detractors, from those questioning Jesus was, “How can this man give us his flesh to eat?”

Now, I want us to pause a moment and realize that this question makes PERFECT sense to ask. Some of us may be going, “Um..like, duh! The body and blood of Christ, the Lord’s Supper? How could these guys not get it?” But remember, to Jesus’s listeners, that event hadn’t happened yet. Now John, the writer of this Gospel, wrote this after Jesus’s death and resurrection and this story is, in many ways, John’s reflections on the last supper...but his listeners would have had no clue what he was talking about. They did not have the reference of Holy Communion to interpret Jesus’s words through. When we hear scriptures like this one, when we hear Jesus talking about bread and flesh, about drinking blood, we have 2,000 years of understanding of the Eucharist to help us understand it. His listeners would not have had that. And so while we hear these words through the lens of this table, of breaking bread and sharing the cup, as a kind of metaphor, as imagery, as a symbol that is more than a mere symbol...Jesus’s listeners would have heard his words much more literally.

The question, “How can this man give us his flesh to eat?” would have been filled with disgust, dismay - perhaps even outrage. Giving us his FLESH to eat? This man is talking about cannibalism! And Jesus here, he doesn’t respond, “No, no, guys - it’s okay, it’s really just bread!” Nah, Jesus is committed to the imagery and, I think, he kind of liked that people were freaking out. Jesus knew how to stir the pot and wanted to see people’s reactions to his words. So he says, “Very truly, I tell you, unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you have no life in you.” I imagine that the looks on the crowd’s faces were just pure disgust. Because by saying this, Jesus upped the ante in two ways.

First, he is now also talking about drinking blood, an idea that, being repulsive by itself, is against Jewish Law. Leviticus 17:10-11 reads, “If anyone of the house of Israel or of the aliens who reside among them eats any blood, I will set my face against that person who eats blood, and will cut that person off from the people. For the life of the flesh is in the blood; and I have given it to you for making atonement for your lives on the altar; for, as life, it is the blood that makes atonement.” So first, ew. Second, big no-no according to God.

But Jesus also adds another level that may have freaked out his listeners, but to us who read this passage in English, we miss it. So the first time Jesus says to eat his flesh, the word used for eat is a basic, common word - basically just “eat.” But the second time Jesus says “eat the flesh of the Son of Man,” the word he is using for “eat” is different. It’s basically an onomatopoeia, a word that conveys a sound. A better equivalent might be ‘munch’ or ‘gnaw.’ It’s a noisy kind of eating, it conveys desperation, attacking one’s food like an animal might. Can you imagine how this would have sounded? “Unless you gnaw the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you have no life in you.”

Now, why would Jesus phrase it this way? I mean, other than to elicit looks of surprise or dismay from his listeners? Now, we know from the Leviticus quote that blood is related to atonement, it’s related to life - it’s necessary for life. And to gnaw food, to eat ravishingly, like a hungry animal - there’s a basic need being met here. A hungry animal eats because, well, it’s hungry! It gnaws on flesh because its life depends on it. And isn’t that what Jesus said? That if you don’t eat his flesh and drink his blood, you won’t have life in you? But for those “who eat my flesh and drink my blood have eternal life!” We are to eat Jesus’s flesh as if our life depends on it - because it does!

And I want to pause here to draw attention to the disconnect. There is definitely something missing from this frenzied, life-dependent eating...and the practice we share together, where we come forward, receive a piece of bread, and dip it in the cup. The first is the image Jesus is painting for us, the second is our polite and reserved Communion practice. But I want to ask if there is a disconnect not between our table manners and animals eating...but in our hearts and what Jesus says as we approach the table? Do we approach this table, do we hunger for the bread and the cup, Jesus’s flesh and blood, as if our lives depended on it? Or is it simply a “nice” practice, that which we wouldn’t miss if we were unable to get to church the once a month or so that we actually practice it? Is it something that we long for? Or is it something that we do and hope it doesn’t make the service go fifteen minutes longer...Is there a disconnect in your heart between the life-dependent hunger that Jesus describes and what you feel as you approach the Lord’s Table?

And there might be a disconnect. I think, in some ways, the Church has failed to keep this meal central to our Christian practice, that which Jesus commanded us to do in remembrance of him, that which Jesus said is necessary for life! We’ve failed to keep it central, to teach of its importance, even to talk about the need and hunger we have for it. Instead we’ve relegated it to once a month or special occasions, or a mere symbol when it is so much more. So I want to talk about the need now, the need for this life-giving meal.

The need is simple. The need is Jesus, the divine Savior who we all need. Jesus says, “Those who eat my flesh and drink my blood abide in me, and I in them.” What does it mean for us to abide in Jesus and for him to abide in us? I think abide is pretty churchy language, we hear this word in Scripture but don’t really use it in our lives. So I want to share not a definition of abide, but what it means for me to abide in Christ and for Christ to abide in me.

For me to abide in Jesus...that’s the comfort and strength that I rely on every day for my journey. For me to abide in Christ, I imagine it like Christ is holding me. When I cry, Christ wipes away my tears. When I’m angry, Christ brings me peace or channels my anger for justice. When I’m tired or weak or feel I can’t continue, Jesus carries me forward, pushes me, strengthens me, offers me rest, never leaves me. Whenever I am at a point in my life where I feel I can’t do it alone, I just have to remember Jesus and he’s RIGHT there. I just have to turn to him. To abide in Christ is to know that you are never alone, you are never forgotten, you are never not loved.

And for Christ to abide in me...well, that’s necessary for me to do this job without losing my sanity! But really, all jokes aside. For Christ to abide in me is necessary for all of us as human beings and Christians. For Christ to abide in me...that means that all those traits Jesus has: Love, mercy, forgiveness, justice, humility, goodness - are given to me. For Christ to abide in me, it means that I can reflect those traits to others. Because Christ is at work within me, I can forgive instead of seeking retribution. I can seek justice in an unjust world. I can love when it would be all too easy to hate. Because I abide in Christ and Christ abides in me, I can foster and develop traits to make me more like Jesus. Now, not saying I’m there - I am a long way off, but I can seek what God seeks, I can set my heart to what God loves, I can continually work on becoming more Christ-like.

Because isn’t that the goal? Not just for me but for all who call themselves followers of Jesus? To BE the body, the flesh, and blood of Jesus Christ to our world? We are the only body Christ has in this world! WE are to be Christ to others, to love, to seek justice, mercy, humility. We are the hands and feet, the body, the flesh and blood of Jesus Christ.

And it’s not easy work to be followers of Christ, to seek to be Christ to a hurting world. It’s hard. We often forget. We lapse. We mess up. And that is why we NEED this meal. We need the flesh and blood of Jesus. We need the constant reminder of who and whose we are! We are Followers of Christ! We belong to God. We NEED God, we have a deep seated hunger in our souls for all that our Savior, our God is. And as we take Communion, time after time, Sunday after Sunday, we are reminded of the sacrifice Christ made for us. We are reminded of the call that God has for our lives, that we are to live according to Christ’s self-sacrificial love for the whole world. Now, it’s not like everytime we take this bread and dip it in the cup we are automatically and magically renewed, made more holy, more right with God...but it certainly helps. It’s a physical, tangible reminder that God is still with us, present in the bread, present in the cup, present, abiding, in our bodies and hearts. And the more often we do it, the more we are used to recognizing the hunger inside of us and coming to the table, turning to God instead of other worldly things, to fill that hunger, the more we come to realize our dependency on abiding in and with our God.

Do you feel that hunger inside of you this morning? Do you long to be with Christ, to feast at his heavenly table? To eat his flesh and drink his blood? For him to abide in you and you in him? Do you accept the promises that Christ offers us in this meal? That we who eat and we who drink will have eternal life? This is what it means to eat and drink at the altar table. To satisfy a hunger that only Christ can subside, to live in this life with the abiding power and presence of Christ Jesus, and to claim the promise of salvation and life eternal with our Triune God.

If you are what you eat, then I want, I need, I hunger, for the body and blood of Christ. Will you join us in the feast?

Amen.

Monday, August 5, 2024

"Living Bread" a sermon on John 6:24-35

John 6:24-35
“Living Bread”
Preached August 4, 2024

“This is the JOY for me! I. love. bread. I love bread!” So started a Weight Watchers commercial featuring Oprah, sharing her passion for bread. And while I’m not a Weight Watchers person myself, this commercial resonated with me. Oprah loves bread? So do I! But probably most of the world loves bread - I think that bread is the ultimate comfort food. Now, I know a lot of you are gluten-free. Some of you are due to medical reasons and many due to choice. And friends, I have respect for you, I pray for you, and I marvel at your discipline! AND I wish you nothing less than the JOY that Oprah gets from bread in whatever fuels your diet. Because bread brings me so much joy. And bread is so versatile and comes in so many forms. From a good wheat sandwich bread, a sourdough, focaccia, pita, tortillas, naan, brioche...to the Eucharist, that is, the bread on our altar table, the bread we bless, break, and eat together.

When I think about my love for bread, I think about bread on two levels. There is the level of eating bread for sustenance, nourishment, strength, and comfort. And then there is the level of sharing in the Lord’s Supper in which I eat the body of Christ and share in the cup for sustenance, nourishment, strength, and comfort. I cannot separate the bread on my dining room table and the bread on our altar table. They both are integral parts of my life. One satisfies my body, the other satisfies my soul, and today’s Gospel reading talks about both kinds of bread.

See, John often operates on at least two levels, talking about two things at once and that’s what’s happening in this conversation between Jesus and the crowd who had followed him. And in order to understand the conversation, we have to look at three different stories about bread.

The first reference to bread in this passage is the reason the crowd followed Jesus, the miracle he had performed in the first part of this chapter in John. We looked at it last week but allow me to refresh your memory: Jesus had crossed to the other side of the Sea of Galilee and a large crowd followed him because they knew of his miracles, how he cured the sick. And so when Jesus saw the crowds he asked his disciples, “Where are we to buy bread for these people to eat?” And in disbelief his disciples answered him that it would take six months wages to feed the crowd and even then, barely! Many would probably leave hungry. But a young boy had five barley loaves and two fish. Jesus had the crowds sit and he gave thanks for the bread and distributed it. 5,000 plus people ate their fill, as much as they wanted, and were satisfied. After the meal was over, the disciples gathered up the leftovers and had twelve baskets full of bread. And the people were amazed and what he had done - so much so that they wanted to make him king! And so Jesus withdrew from the crowd...and then, of course, the crowd followed him again.

Because wouldn’t you follow a person who cured the sick? That’s the reason this crowd of 5,000 came to him in the first place! And then that same person, that same man, fed them until they were full! Of course they wanted to make him king! A politician today who supported good healthcare, worked with a little and gave a lot, and made sure all were fed? All were satisfied? They’d have my vote! But Jesus didn’t want to be king and he wasn’t running for political office. He just wanted to feed the hungry, to break bread together with them. I think this is an amazing thing about Jesus, about our God, that he asks, “Where are we to buy bread for these people to eat?” Jesus sees the hunger in the crowd, the physical hunger in the bodies of 5,000 people and he doesn’t just say, “Where are they going to get food...on their own?” or “What am I going to eat?” He said, “How am I, how are we - going to feed them?” Jesus is the ultimate dinner party host, attentive, caring, gracious. And from this story, we can learn that Jesus cares about physical hunger. Jesus cares about the bread, or lack thereof, on our dining room tables, on the tables of our neighbors. Jesus cares about the tables of 44 million Americans and 2.4 billion people worldwide who are food insecure. And to those of us who have bread, even if it’s just a handful of barley loaves, Jesus is asking, “How are we to feed them?”

This is the first story of bread in our reading today, the foundation of what we are talking about: Bodies, hunger, bread, physical bread. And this is the reason the crowds followed Jesus and he said to them, “Very truly, I tell you, you are looking for me, not because you saw signs, but because you ate your fill of loaves. Do not work for the food that perishes, but for the food that endures for eternal life, which the Son of Man will give you. For it is on him that God the Father has set his seal.” And here the crowd and Jesus have a little back and forth discussion. The crowd is looking for signs to believe in Jesus, to follow him, to take him for his word on who he is and what he has to offer. Apparently, healing the sick and feeding 5,000 weren’t enough. So they say to him, “What sign are you going to give us then, so that we may see it and believe you? What work are you performing? Our ancestors ate the manna in the wilderness; as it is written, ‘He gave them bread from heaven to eat.’”

This is the second story about bread, and it brings us back to the book of Exodus: The Israelites had been led out of slavery in Egypt by Moses. They left Egypt, crossed the Red Sea, and were now wandering the desert, in the area that we know as the Sinai peninsula. They were journeying toward the promised land and gave God the credit for freeing them from slavery. This release from Egypt was an impactful, defining moment for the Israelites, an event that continues to shape and define the Jewish people even in our modern day. But, after two months wandering in the desert, well, it’s easy to get a little forgetful, a little disgruntled, a little hungry. Perhaps even a little hangry. And so they called out, “If only we had died by the hand of the Lord in the land of Egypt, when we sat by the fleshpots and ate our fill of bread; for you have brought us out into this wilderness to kill this whole assembly with hunger.” They were hungry and God took notice.

So God told Moses, “I am going to rain bread from heaven for you.” And God delivered. Every morning in the desert after that, for forty years, when the Israelites woke up, there was bread from heaven, manna, on the ground like morning dew on the grass. They ate their fill of a bread that tasted like wafers with honey, and their hunger was satisfied.

Once again, God notices hunger and does something about it, God provides bread, manna from heaven. And, there was something more than quenching physical hunger, something more than bread that God gave to the Israelites in the gift of manna. In manna, in bread, the Israelites were reminded to whom they belonged. They remembered their salvation from the land of Egypt, from slavery and oppression. In the gift of bread, they remembered that they had a God who would not abandon them, that they had a God who liberates and gives them freedom, that they had a God who cared about their physical AND spiritual hunger - a God who gives manna, bread, in the wilderness, sustenance for body and soul, when it’s most needed.

And the crowd that followed Jesus on this day, they were looking to Jesus for something like manna, a sign of who he was. And Jesus replies, saying to them, “Very truly, I tell you, it was not Moses who gave you the bread from heaven, but it is my Father who gives you the true bread from heaven. For the bread of God is that which comes down from heaven and gives life to the world.” Jesus was reminding them that manna was more than food, more than bread, it was sustenance in the wilderness for their bodies and souls.

And as those in the crowd are reminded of this, they realize they are hungry. But as they say to Jesus, “Sir, give us this bread always,” they are not asking for physical bread. The hunger they have is not necessarily in their bodies, but in the souls. They are seeking the bread that will give them sustenance in the wilderness. That will remind them of the promises of God, grace and love, liberation and salvation. They are asking for bread because they’re spiritually hungry and they are looking for something that will satisfy their every need, satisfy their hungry hearts.

And Jesus says to them, “I am the bread of life. Whoever comes to me will never be hungry, and whoever believes in me will never be thirsty.” And this is the third story about bread in this morning’s Gospel reading. The God who cares about our physical hunger, the God who gives us bread, the God who gives manna in the wilderness, who sustains and liberates God’s people - Jesus is claiming to be that God. Jesus is claiming that through him, the gift of manna, of satisfying spiritual hunger in the wilderness, was not just available to the Israelites in the desert, but is available to the crowd before him, and by extension, to all, including us here today.

This is why on the night Jesus was betrayed, he took bread, blessed it, broke it, gave it to his disciples and said, “Take and eat. This is my body broken for you. Do this in remembrance of me as often as you eat it.” Jesus is bread for the world, Jesus is the bread of life, that sustenance which will satisfy every spiritual hunger we have, that will satisfy our hungry hearts, that will give us a taste of freedom, of liberation, of grace, of love, of joy! This is the joy! Not just that we love bread, physical bread. The joy is that the Bread of Life loves us! That Jesus is the bread of life! And that bread is available to all, and those who partake of it shall never grow hungry or thirsty again.

So as you come to the altar table today and partake in Communion. And as you go home and you eat bread at your dining room tables. As you feed others bread. As you support Richard Brown Food Pantry as our monthly mission this month ...remember, all these breads are connected. From our dining room tables, to the bread we feed others, to the bread we bless and break together - Christ is here, present with us, present in our hearts, present in the bread. Christ is the Bread of Life, offering us that which will satisfy our hungry hearts, that which will guide us through the wilderness, that which is Love - for God, for self, for neighbor. So come, come to the table, eat the bread, and remember all that the Living Bread has done, is doing, and will do for us.

Amen.

Wednesday, July 31, 2024

Call to Worship based on Matthew 2:1-12

Leader: The Christmas season is coming to a close.
People: Now what?
L: The magi have finally reached their destination.
P: Now what?
L: We’ve come to the end of a journey.
P: Now what?
L: God who gave the magi a star - give us light to follow.
P: May we continue to follow Jesus, our light.
All: Let us worship the Light that has come. Amen!

Call to Worship based on Luke 2:41-52

Leader: Lord, we come to you today as children:
People: In wonder & amazement, still reeling from the joy of Christmas.
Leader: Lord, we come to you today as children:
People: Full of questions and curiosity, a desire to learn and to know.
Leader: Lord, we come to you today as children:
People: Safe and secure in Your love.
Leader: Lord, we come to you today as children:
People: Knowing that we will grow in holiness and love.
Leader: As children of God,
All: Let us worship our God, our Divine Parent. Amen.

Call to Worship based on Hymn "Lord, Listen to Your Children Praying"

L: Lord, listen to your children praying.
P: Send us love!
L: Lord, listen to your children praying.
P: Send us power!
L: Lord, listen to your children praying.
P: Send us grace!
All: Lord, send your Spirit into this place. Amen!

Monday, July 29, 2024

“Bread, Breadth, and Breathtaking” a sermon on John 6:1-21 & Ephesians 3:14-21

John 6:1-21
Ephesians 3:14-21
“Bread, Breadth, and Breathtaking”
Preached Sunday, July 28, 2024

Have you ever had an experience that took you days, weeks, months, or even years to process? To fully understand what had happened, what you experienced, to make sense of it and find the words to describe it?

Unfortunately, traumatic events can often fall under this category: the dissolution of a relationship, abuse, an accident, major or emergency surgery, the death of a loved one…

There are also positive or life-changing or altering events that can fit into this category: falling in love, birthing a child, moving, making a career or life stage change, a significant trip to a new or meaningful destination...

And then, there are those events that may not be life-altering or major events in our lives but they were so experiential, so bodily, that it takes times for our minds and our words to catch up with what we experience in our bodies: that first bite of the most delicious pastry of your life, sky-diving, seeing your favorite music artist live, running your first marathon, looking out at the most gorgeous sunset you’ve ever seen, the view from the mountaintop…

For the people in our Gospel lesson today, for the crowd of 5000 plus - this is one of those experiences for them. This large crowd followed Jesus because they saw the signs he was doing for the sick… Were they curious? Full of hope? In it for the entertainment, the novelty of it all? Perhaps. I would also venture to say that they were hungry.

Now, to be clear, I don’t mean that they were hungry for food - although I am sure they were physically hungry as well. I don’t think they followed Jesus with any expectation that Jesus would feed them dinner - surely with no expectations that he would feed them with the miraculous multiplication of bread and fish…and yet, that’s what happened.

And as they were seated on the ground and bread and fish were passed around and they all ate and had their fill - they experienced something - something life-altering. Something that they couldn’t wrap their minds and thoughts around, even as the taste of the bread and fish was on their tongues and they felt the comfortable fullness in their bellies. They had an experience that changed everything for them. And although they left physically sated - they were now more hungry than ever.

This week’s Gospel Lesson kicks off what we call the 5-week Bread of Life Discourse in the lectionary. The next 50 verses in the 6th Chapter of John all show the people trying to make sense of this experience they just had where they were miraculously fed. The Revised Common Lectionary, that’s the ecumenical assigned readings for each Sunday, spends the next four weeks - five including this one - working through this chapter, walking us through trying to make sense of the experience that the crowd of 5,000 is trying to make sense of, talking about bread. As a disclaimer, while I will be spending a couple weeks talking about the Bread of Life, I won’t be spending all 5 weeks on it in my sermons - cause even for someone who loves carbs, that can get stale real fast… (See what I did there?)

But in essence - the crowd that day experienced something - something beyond the taste of bread and fish, something beyond satisfying their physical hunger, something that they experienced in their bodies and their lives but they needed their minds and souls to catch up. It was life altering but they couldn’t quite find the words right away.

Now let’s put a pin in this story of the feeding of the 5,000 because it’s not the only well-known Jesus story we are offered in this week’s reading from John. We also have Jesus walking on the water toward his disciples in the boat.

For the crowd he just fed, they didn’t know what they had experienced but they knew they experienced SOMETHING. And so their immediate reaction was to overwhelm him and make him king. A king who could feed us all until our bellies are full? Sounds like a good king to me - and it must have to the crowd too - but that's not why Jesus fed them. So Jesus and the disciples retreat and go up to the mountain to pray. The disciples then go down to sea but Jesus hasn’t joined them yet and a strong wind picked up. It was then that the disciples saw a ghost. Or they thought they did - they were terrified to see a figure walking to them on the water. The Sea of Galilee was traditionally thought of in the time of Jesus as reaching all the way down to the underworld - it is no wonder that their imaginations were running wild and they were afraid. This was not something they experienced every day after all.

Jesus met them in their physical fear - as he met the crowd of 5,000 in their physical hunger - and he said to the disciples, “It is I; do not be afraid.” And their boat automatically reached the shore to which they were going.

Again, for the disciples in that boat…this would have been another EXPERIENCE for them to process and make sense of. These kinds of events keep on piling up and happening around Jesus.

Both of these experiences - the feeding of the 5,000 and Jesus comforting the disciples' fears after walking to them on the water - both of these experiences are physical. But they also point to something beyond the physical.

Jesus met the crowd that day in their physical hunger.
Jesus met the disciples that night in their physical fear.
Jesus offered the crowd physical bread.
Jesus offered the disciples physical reassurance, “Do not be afraid.”

Jesus meets us in our physical hunger.
Jesus meets us in our physical fear.
He offers us physical bread.
He offers us physical reassurance “Do not be afraid.”

But he also offers something else, something more, something alongside the physical - to the crowds, to the disciples, and to us.

Christ, through meeting the crowds and disciples' physical needs, has also filled their innermost beings - or they’re starting to realize their innermost beings need to be filled with love. God’s love. For those familiar with the idea of Maslow’s hierarchy of needs, this makes sense. We have physical needs for food and safety and often our spiritual needs, our emotional needs, our innermost needs struggle to get the attention and realization they deserve until those other needs are met.

But for the crowd and the disciples - those deeper spiritual needs, the need for God’s love - it was there all along. It’s why they followed Jesus in the first place - they were hungry, hungry for something more. Hungry for a reason why. Hungry for hope. Hungry for love.

Which brings us to our reading from Ephesians, one of my favorite excerpts in all of Scripture:

“I pray that…Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith, as you are being rooted and grounded in love. I pray that you may have the power to comprehend, with all the saints, what is the breadth and length and height and depth and to know the love of Christ that surpasses knowledge, so that you may be filled with all the fullness of God.”

Jesus wasn’t just offering bread and reassurance that day - he was offering the breathtaking breadth of God’s love.

And love is a lot harder to understand - to digest - than bread. It’s why Jesus spends the next 50 versus and the lectionary the next 4 weeks talking about Jesus as the Bread of Life. Yes, carb lovers. You are finally justified by the way - If Jesus is God and God is Love and Jesus is the Bread of life, ergo bread is love. Not really, but kind of. I’m off topic.

That day that the crowds were fed, a spiritual hunger was ignited. One that could only be satisfied by Jesus, by God’s love. And it’s not something we can always describe with words.

What has your spiritual journey looked like? What has it meant for you, to become rooted in God’s love? To know the breadth and length and height and depth of God’s love? It’s probably an amalgamation of different life experiences and events - some we have words for, some we don’t have words for yet, and some we may never have words for.

For me, I can think about being taken to church as a kid and loving it for the doughnuts - a physical experience. And then staying for the community and love I felt there. I think about summers at Camp Asbury - especially the summer we talked about trees. Did you know that sometimes, the roots of trees go down double the depth and double the length into the ground as the branches do? When it comes to our faith I think about the branches as those spiritual experiences we have words for - and the roots, so much below the surface, as the love God has given us that we’re still trying to wrap our minds and hearts around. I think of the daily humbling experiences of pastoring and mothering and everything in between. All the ways, big and small, that God reaches out to me - to us - in love. My words fail, and yet God’s love remains. And every day, God offers to take my breath away with the ways God wants to root me in God’s love.

So today let’s recognize that we are hungry. And if we’re hungry because our stomachs are empty or we live in fear - know that God meets you in those physical needs. And let us, the church, your community know, so that we can be Jesus to you and meet you in those needs.

And let’s also recognize that we are hungry for something more - to be satiated with love. The love of God which is breathtaking and always offered to us in abundance - as Jesus offers bread and fish to the crowds in abundance that day. God wants to blow us away with the breadth and length and height and depth of God’s love for us. So just admit to God that you are hungry, and you will see how the God who is the Bread of Life, satisfies our souls.

Amen.

Thursday, July 25, 2024

"What Are You Taking Home With You?" A camp sermon

2 Corinthians 4:18
“What Are You Taking Home With You?”
Preached Thursday, July 25, 2024 at Camp Asbury

“because we look not at what can be seen but at what cannot be seen, for what can be seen is temporary, but what cannot be seen is eternal.”

What are you taking home with camp from you this week?

(Get answers)

Hopefully you are leaving with everything you came with. I think your parents or caregivers would appreciate that. Maybe you’re leaving with some crafts, some artwork, a four leaf clover…

I have some things here with me that I’ve taken home from camp when I was a camper and counselor here…Let me show you:

(Go through props - art, four leaf clovers, letters, tshirts, etc)


But…are any of you taking something home that you can’t hold? These things, our luggage, our camp tshirts, crafts we made…these are all what we call tangible. We can see them and we can touch them and hold them and physically carry them home.

What are you carrying out mentally? What has this week at camp taught you? Has anyone learned a new skill?

(Let campers list skills they’ve learned)

While I was at camp I learned how to make a fire and cook over it. I learned how to be a complete boss at the ropes course. I learned the words to a bunch of camp songs. I even learned interesting facts about nature/God’s creation.

What about friendships? Have any of you formed new friendships this week? Or this summer? Why don’t we just raise our hands for this one?

Yeah - I made new friends while I was a camper. One year I met a girl named Hilary and we wrote letters and emails to each other the whole school year. And for the next couple summers we planned on coming back to camp the same week and getting to share camp together again. I also have lifelong friends who were my co-counselors at camp. I’ve met people at camp who I’ve carried into my life beyond camp.

What about in Bible study - what have you learned this week?

(Let campers share about Bible study)

This week you’ve heard about the Ethiopian Eunuch getting baptized and how God’s love is for ALL people - ages, nations, races, genders. You heard about The Last Supper and how God calls all Christians, even those with different worship practices, to be one together. You heard about The Lord’s Prayer and how God wants to hear us pray and how God wants us to care and pray for each other too. Today you heard or maybe you will hear around your campfire’s about Jesus teaching on hospitality, and again about how God wants to include ALL people and asks us to do the same. Tomorrow you’ll hear about The Good Samaritan and again about how God wants us to love and care for all people and show them God’s love.

Now my question is - are these things you’ve learned about - are they tangible - something you can see and touch and smell and taste or are they intangible? Something you can’t touch but you can feel it in your heart? What do you think?

(Let them answer)

Right - they are intangible. We can’t carry these things home in our luggage. But we do carry them with us - we carry them in our hearts.

We carry them in the experiences we’ve had here at camp. We might not have touched them with our hands but we have experienced something and we know what we’ve experienced just as much as we know the crafts we made this week. And we can take those things with us. We can take the friendships we’ve made - and if we can carry those friendships throughout the school year or longer - that’s awesome. And even if we can’t stay in touch after camp - we know those friendships are still things that, even if for just a week or for a summer, have changed us - hopefully for the better. And we can take those things we talked about in Bible study - and they can remain head knowledge or we can carry them with us in our hearts. And let the words our counselors shared with us this week, let them change how we see God and others. Let them change how we practice living out our faith. Let them change how our faith becomes alive because of the way we treat and welcome and care and pray for other people.

And in this way - although these things are intangible - they can be tangible. You can’t touch the idea of loving others like God loves them - but when you live it out, you can. You can touch your neighbor’s hands or hug them as you offer them care and friendship. You can give them food or a meal. You can live out love. God’s love for them. Through you - God’s intangible love - can become tangible. You can see and experience the ways you show care and support for one another and how you were acting as God, as Jesus, for that person.

So tonight we will take Holy Communion - have bread and juice together - and this is something that is both tangible and intangible.

It’s tangible because you can touch the bread. You can taste it. You can taste the sweetness of the juice on your tongue. You can see bread crumbs on the ground. This is something we experience with our bodies. And Jesus wanted to give us that tangible experience of a way to remember something intangible. That is - Jesus wanted to give us something that we can see and smell and taste - to remember something that we can’t see and smell and taste but we can feel it in our hearts - and that’s how much God loves us.

And we can remember how much God loves us every time we come to the Communion table. And maybe we come from different traditions and maybe in our non-camp life, we don’t normally take communion - and the beautiful thing about that is, we can connect this table to every table we eat at. Every time we eat bread. Everytime we have juice. Every time we eat with people and it's an experience of love and joy. Every time we do that - we can also remember this meal - this meal that means God’s love for us. And in that way, the intangible - God’s love for us - becomes the tangible - the taste and smell of food and the love shared between people who eat together.

So tomorrow as you pack up your bags and stop by lower Asbury on your way out to gather anything you made this week - and you think about what you’re bringing home with you this week…

Think about the things that you’re bringing home with you that you can't touch:

The friendships you made.
The skills you learned.
How you’ve experienced God while here.
How you’ve learned about how God loves us and wants us to love others.
How this meal reminds us of God’s love.

You can’t touch these things - but you’ve experienced them this week and they have been just as real to you as the luggage that you are bringing home. And in some ways, they are even more real - eventually you may outgrow the camp tshirts. The four leaf clovers pressed between the pages of your Bible may disintegrate into nothing. Crafts may fall apart, be lost, or thrown away. But God’s love isn’t going anywhere. God’s love for you isn’t going anywhere. God will always be reaching out to you - through Scripture, through bread and juice, through friendships, and through the beauty of nature - always reaching out to share love with you and encourage you to share God’s love with each other.

And that’s a beautiful thing - whether you can touch it or not. So I pray and hope and know that you will be leaving camp this week with God’s love because it is always with you.

Amen.

Monday, July 22, 2024

"Can't A Guy Get a Break?" a sermon on Mark 6:30-34, 53-56

Mark 6:30-34, 53-56
“Can’t A Guy Get a Break?”
Preached Sunday, July 21, 2024

Before I start, I want to say that I truly make an effort to prioritize Sabbath rest in my life. And we’ll talk about that in the sermon today. But when life gets in the way of Sabbath - I try to have a sense of humor about it. For example, whenever I find myself putting on my clergy collar or getting ready for work on what is supposed to be my day off, I listen to or sing the 2008 song, “Ain’t No Rest for the Wicked” by Cage the Elephant. I am not sure with the age demographic in the room if you’ll have heard it but it goes:

“There ain't no rest for the wicked
Money don't grow on trees
I got bills to pay
I got mouths to feed
There ain't nothing in this world for free
I know I can't slow down
I can't hold back
Though you know, I wish I could
Oh no there ain't no rest for the wicked
Until we close our eyes for good"

I chuckle at the irony of singing “there ain’t no rest for the wicked” while getting ready to do church ministry, and if I am working on my Sabbath, it is often because of my other priorities of care and compassion for others - funerals are a common example of Sabbath exceptions.

And, the fact of the matter is, rest is holy. I wouldn’t like to go as far as to say a life without rest is wicked because a life without rest can be forced upon someone, but there is a kernel of truth in that. Sabbath rest is holy. And a life that revolves around Sabbath rest is a holy one, one that pleases God. Robbing ourselves and others of Sabbath rest is, indeed, a wicked thing.

Sometimes we think of “Sabbath” in Christian circles as something just for clergy but it isn’t just for ministers. We all need rest and we all are commanded to observe the Sabbath. Observing the Sabbath and keeping it holy is one of the ten commandments. And, yet, I often hear it is the commandment that we treat as optional, a suggestion, rather than an edict.

The odds are that you - we - most of us if not all of us in this room - struggle with the concept and observation of Sabbath. And you may therefore find some modicum of comfort in today’s Gospel reading where we see Jesus’s plans for rest waylaid. We see throughout the Gospels that Jesus prioritizes rest - even when it doesn’t exactly work out, like in today’s reading. Sabbath rest and renewing time with God was a pillar in his life. For him Sabbath was not a strict observance but something that enhances our lives, our relationship with God, and our relationships with one another. As he says to the religious leaders: “The Sabbath was made for humankind and not humankind for the Sabbath, so the Son of Man is lord even of the Sabbath.” Sabbath is a gift that God wants for our lives - why don’t we accept it?

Indeed how we observe the Sabbath has changed from the Mosaic Laws found in the Hebrew Bible and that some sects of our Jewish siblings still follow this day - rules about cooking and opening doors and such. Our Christian understanding of Sabbath has diverged from this concept - including the day - our Jewish siblings practice Sabbath rest on Saturday - the seventh day of the week, the day in the Creation story when God rested from the work of Creation. Christians, generally, think of Sabbath as Sunday - the day Jesus was resurrected from the dead.

For Christians who take the commandment of Sabbath seriously, the details of how it is followed isn’t as important as the priority of it being observed at all. That Sabbath is a priority for and in our lives. That we come to the one whose yoke is easy and his burden is light and find rest. That we set the example of what it looks like to rest in God and in doing so, participate in re-wiring the system of our world and culture so that all may find rest in Christ.

In his book, “Sabbath as Resistance,” Christian theologian Walter Brueggemann writes about the commandment of observing Sabbath. The whole premise of this book is that the commandment to observe Sabbath, which comes fourth in the ten commandments, is a bridge commandment. He opens his book with this thesis statement:

“…the fourth commandment on the Sabbath is the ‘crucial bridge’ that connects the Ten Commandments together. The fourth commandment looks back to the first three commandments and the God who rests. At the same time, the Sabbath commandment looks forward to the last six commandments that concern the neighbor; they provide for rest alongside the neighbor. God, self, and all members of the household share in common rest on the seventh day; that social reality provides a commonality and a coherence not only to the community of covenant but to the commands of Sinai as well.”

In order to understand the importance of the commandment of Sabbath as a bridge commandment, we have to understand the context of the book of Exodus that is alluded to in the preamble to the commandments and the first commandment: “And God spoke all these words: ‘I am the Lord your God, who brought you out of Egypt, out of the land of slavery. You shall have no other gods before me.”

The book of Exodus has followed the slavery and oppression of the Israelites in Egypt, in the land of Pharaoh. And then God, through Moses, guided them out of slavery, out of Pharaoh's grasp, through the Red Sea, and delivered into the hands of God. It is then that Moses goes up the Mount and receives the Torah, the Law, from God.

Right from the start, God defines God’s self as the God who led them out of Egypt and then says they are to have no other gods before God’s self. We don’t think of Pharaoh in this way today - but to the ancient Egyptians and to the Israelites - Pharaoh was a god. He was seen as divine and had immense power and control over the Israelites - he forced them into slavery at the whims of the Pharaoh, pushing them to produce for the wealth and gain of Pharaoh and of Egypt, and gave them no allowance for rest.

Right off the bat the God of the Israelites, our God, is telling God’s people - I am not like the god of Egypt. I am not like Pharaoh. I am above Pharaoh. My ways are different from Pharaoh's. We then are given the second and third commandments about idols and misusing God’s name. The first three commandments are then primarily about our relationship with God. In the Gospels, Jesus sums up and the commandments, law, and prophets as “Love God and love neighbor as self.” So the first three commandments can be seen as primarily being about loving God. Then we come to the bridge commandment, the Sabbath commandment: “Remember the Sabbath day by keeping it holy. Six days you shall labor and do all your work, but the seventh day is a sabbath to the Lord your God. On it you shall not do any work, neither you, nor your son or daughter, nor your male or female servant, nor your animals, nor any foreigner residing in your towns. For in six days the Lord made the heavens and the earth, the sea, and all that is in them, but he rested on the seventh day. Therefore the Lord blessed the Sabbath day and made it holy.” In this commandment we see a shift, a pivot, a bridge being built. For the next 6 commandments are all about how we treat, how we love, our neighbors, our fellow human beings. Sabbath, however, is about both love of God and love of neighbor. It connects the first three commandments to the last six and is absolutely vital for this connecting work.

When we observe Sabbath, in light of it being the bridging commandment, we are recognizing that God is our God and not Pharaoh. We are recognizing that the world we live in is God’s, not Pharaoh's, and we will follow God’s way which includes Sabbath rest. Pharaoh's way is the way of slavery. It is the way of using humans as tools and things rather than beloved children of God. Pharaoh’s way is the way of a system built on production and wealth and the anxiety and pressure to produce wealth. It is the way of mammon - the word used for wealth when Jesus says, “No one can serve two masters, for a slave will either hate the one and love the other or be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve God and wealth.” While we no longer have a literal Pharaoh that we view as divine in our world, the kingdom of Pharaoh and all that Pharaoh represented is still going strong in our world. That is the constant desire to produce enough. To make enough. To have enough. At any and all cost.

Brueggemann says, “Rest as did the creator God! And while you rest - be sure that your neighbors rest alongside you. Indeed, sponsor a system of rest that contradicts the system of anxiety of Pharaoh, because you are no longer subject to Pharaoh's anxiety system.”

Now here’s the hard question: How come we still live like we are slaves in Egypt under the system of Pharaoh? At least when it comes to the systems of anxiety, production, and lack of rest that drives our lives? Why do we live under this system for ourselves and allow our neighbors to live under it as well?

Which brings to me a sin that we don’t often name for what it is, a sin, and contrary to God’s desires for us: The Protestant Work Ethic. The term was coined in 1904 by an economist, Max Weber, as he talked about the correlation between Calvinism and Capitalism. The Protestant Work Ethic has largely defined our American capitalistic culture for at least the last 100 years if not much more. The basic premise is that how hard you work is a reflection of how much you are worth, how good you are, if you are “saved.”

The Protestant Work Ethic tells us our value comes from what we produce. And not produce as in Fruit of the Spirit but produce in terms of economical gain, of blood, sweat, and tears poured into the cog of the economy, how much we grind, how much and how well we run the rat race. This can be applicable in any profession and stage of life. How many hours we work, how many meetings we have, how much we earn, how far we advance, what our supervisors or evaluations say about us… And that also all translates to the house we live in, the cars we drive, how many children we have and how they behave, how many and how luxurious of vacations we can take, whether we can afford the fancy lattes, etc., etc.. It can even relate to our lives in the church: is the church producing attendance and offering numbers that are up to par?

The Protestant Work Ethic though is just another term for the culture or system of Pharaoh that God commands us to not follow. It is a system that robs us of God as our God with no other Gods before God. We cannot serve both God and Pharaoh. We cannot serve both God and the endless drive to produce without rest.

And so allow me to ask: what would it look like for you, for you specifically, to make Sabbath rest a priority in your life? What would it look like to center yourself in our God who desires to make us lie down in green pastures besides still water? What would it look like to center yourself in Jesus whose burden is easy and whose yoke is light? Practically - what could taking the commandment for Sabbath seriously look like for you?

For me, I try and frame Sabbath rest as having one day off every week that honors God. AND, one day off a week to be human. My God honoring time can look like worshiping, praying, napping, gardening, spending time in loving community…and when I’m at my best, putting down my phone and its relentless stream of notifications and information. My day to be human is about errands and appointments and all that is required of me to function as a basic human and member of society.

Christian author Rob Bell framed Sabbath like this:

“Sabbath is taking a day a week to remind myself that I did not make the world and that it will continue to exist without my efforts.
Sabbath is a day when my work is done, even if it isn’t.
Sabbath is a day when my job is to enjoy. Period.
Sabbath is a day when I am fully available to myself and those I love most.
Sabbath is a day when I remember that when God made the world, he saw that it was good.
Sabbath is a day when I produce nothing.
Sabbath is a day when at the end I say, ‘I didn’t do anything today,’ and I don’t add, ‘And I feel so guilty.’
Sabbath is a day when my phone is turned off, I don’t check my email, and you can’t get a hold of me.”

I’ve heard it phrased this way as well - Sabbath is a day where you ask yourself - what would I enjoy doing or not doing today? And what could I do - or not do - that would center me in God who is Lord of the Sabbath? Where does our enjoyment and centering God meet? That is a day of Sabbath rest.

Now here’s my disclaimer or warning to you - when we first start practicing Sabbath…it does not feel good. We often think, “Oh I’m so tired, I’m so overworked, I’m so busy” that we must think OF COURSE a day of rest will feel good, like a tantalizing treat for our overworked selves. But the reality is, it feels good to be needed. It feels good to do and to produce. We get endorphins when we check items off of our to-do lists. When those phone notifications go off, our brains are flooded with hormones - someone needs me. Someone wants me. I can help.

We are so embedded in the culture of Pharaoh, in the culture of Productivity, that we need to detox from it. And detoxing doesn’t feel good at first. We may feel restless and listless as we have to force ourselves to rest, centering ourselves in God - and rest centered in God is different from the vegetative state we can enter when binge watching a favorite show. We have to actively engage our minds and our souls to turn toward God rather than turn toward productivity.

And if we stick with it, eventually we will find enjoyment in Sabbath rest. We will realize that rest and Sabbath is not a reward for the hard work well done, Sabbath is rest for the work we have ahead of us. It’s a small mental shift but a meaningful one. If we only rest when we feel we deserve it, when we feel the work is done, then we will never truly rest. But if we rest because we know we need rest and we know we need to be centered in God for the compassionate, caring, loving work God calls us to do… that’s different.

We rest so that we can love God and love neighbor more fully. We rest so that we can have compassion.

In today’s Gospel reading, Jesus’s plans for rest don’t go exactly as planned - something that I can certainly relate to and assures me that Jesus was human and the world he lived in, while different in some ways, is still the same world we experience here today… Even though Jesus’s plans for rest don’t go exactly as planned - Jesus still had compassion for the crowds who needed him. He was able to love his neighbor. For as much as he was human, Jesus was also Lord of the Sabbath. And as the bridging commandment, Sabbath is just as much about love of God as it is about love of neighbor. Jesus prioritized rest and renewal, spread throughout his whole ministry, so that he could serve with compassion and love. I trust that even if Jesus didn’t catch a break in this passage, he continued to make rest a priority. He continued to pray and center himself in love. Sabbath was just part of the rhythm of his life.

My invitation to all of us today is for us to center Sabbath as a priority in our lives, to make it a part of the rhythms of our lives, to view it as the highly important bridging commandment it is. Let us hear the voice of God inviting us to lie down in green pastures and besides still waters, let us heed that voice and through Sabbath rest, find better love of God and love of neighbor.

May it be so. Amen.

Tuesday, July 16, 2024

"An Invitation to Wonder & Praise" a sermon based on Ephesians 1:3-14

Ephesians 1:3-14
“An Invitation to Wonder & Praise”
Preached Sunday, July 14, 2024

What is the best gift you have ever received?

I asked this question online as I worked on this week’s sermon and got an array of responses: surprise trips, a gaming console, a complete collector’s edition of a book series, custom made gifts, homemade crafts from children, a clock-making kit, family Bibles and heirlooms, gifts that were the “last” gifts from a loved one before they died… People shared gifts of thoughtful affirmations and hand-written notes they have received, one person received a video gift of friends and family from all over the country.

There were also the less tangible gifts: time with family, the gift of children, of love.

When I considered people’s answers to this question and my own experience I seemed to notice two common things. People’s best gifts they’ve ever received are one or both of these things:

1. Lavish and generous - a gift that just floors you for how the giver went above and beyond in giving it to you. And
2. A gift that is personal and it’s less about the gift and more about how much the giver knows you, “gets” you, loves and appreciates you.

Think now of a gift or gifts you have received that have been among the best. That floored you with the generosity and love behind them. When you have been given a gift that just amazes you at the generosity, thoughtfulness, kindness, love and appreciation behind it…

The writer of Ephesians, is GUSHING about a gift that he - and we all - have received: the gift of God’s love, the adoption of us as God’s children, redemption, forgiveness, salvation, an inheritance through Christ… Actually, you can tell he is just gushing, that he’s floored, amazed at these gifts by the writing. In the Greek today’s 11 verses are all basically one convoluted run-on sentence. The translators of most English versions, including what we read today in worship, normally make it more palatable and understandable by breaking it down into sentences but in the original Greek it reads as one long gushing sentence. I can relate to him here, when I’m excited over something, REALLY excited about something, I tend to talk faster, my voice gets higher, and I can go on and on and on… And that’s basically our reading from Ephesians today.

This week’s Scripture is an invitation to wonder and praise. It is an invitation for us to marvel at the lavish love, the generous gifts, that God has given us - as it lists in today’s Scripture: the gift of God’s love, the adoption of us as God’s children, redemption, forgiveness, salvation, an inheritance through Christ.

The sacrament of Baptism is a way we recognize, celebrate, wonder, and give thanks for God’s lavish gifts that we have received from our Maker. Today we celebrate the lavish gifts and love that God has bestowed upon the child we baptized - and we remembered and recognized that same love was and is given to all of us. I’ve had the joy of sharing in multiple baptisms with you and getting to preach on it several times so what I am going to say to you today, many of you will have heard it before, but it never hurts to be reminded.

One of my favorite ways to frame baptism is a signing of the adoption papers. Before we are baptized, we are all already loved by God. We are all already God’s children in God’s eyes. Yet through the sacrament of baptism we are saying, “Okay, God - I know you love me as your child. I love you as my parent. I know you love me and I will respond to that love with more love - and let my life be shaped by you, the God of Love.” When a child is baptized, their parents bring that child forth as a recognition that this child belongs to God, even more than this child belongs to those who formed them in this world. It is a recognition that they will raise this child as God’s child, loving them, surrounding them in a loving Christian community, and teaching them about God’s love.

The sacrament of Baptism, this holy, mysterious, and wonderful ritual is part of how we participate in God’s divine plans of God’s love for us and for all. Through baptism we wonder at God’s love, we praise God’s goodness, and recognize the lavish and generous gifts God gives us. Being baptized, bringing a child forth to be baptized, remembering our baptism - it was a way we acknowledge, we recognize before God and before one another, that we know we are loved by God.

Part of the reading from Ephesians today is not only to marvel and wonder at God’s love, but the writer’s intent is to assure Gentile readers in the church of Ephesus that God always had a plan for them. That their acceptance into God’s covenant, their adoption as children of God - these things are not afterthoughts. That like their Jewish siblings, God always planned to gather them up in love and offer them an inheritance through Christ. The Scriptures say: “He destined us for adoption as his children through Jesus Christ, according to the good pleasure of his will.” It says that before the foundation of the world, this was all part of God’s plans, we were always part of God’s plan - God has always, since before Creation, planned to adopt us, to love us.

This again is another invitation to marvel and wonder and praise God - you were never an afterthought to God. Before creation, God already knew that you would be divinely loved, a child of God.

And, the Scripture goes on to give us even more reasons to just be floored at the lavish generosity of God’s gift of love. It reads, “he has made known to us the mystery of his will, according to his good pleasure that he set forth in Christ, as a plan for the fullness of time, to gather up all things in him, things in heaven and things on earth.” That is, God’s divine plan, God’s BIG big picture plan, is to draw all things to God’s self in love. As the first verse of our Psalm today declares: “The earth is the Lord's and all that is in it, the world, and those who live in it.”

We started worship this morning by singing “He’s got the whole world in his hands'' - a children’s song which sums up so succinctly these points our Scripture readings make: The earth is the Lord’s and all that is in it…God’s got it in God’s hands! We know this truth as children when we sing this song but the hardships and motions of everyday life can make us forget this fundamental and awe inspiring truth - we are all God’s. We are all loved by God. God’s got us all in the Divine’s loving hands. This song is another invitation to marvel and praise God for the lavish and generous extent of God’s gift of love for us - for them - for all - for the whole world.

This morning I wanted to extend to you an invitation to wonder and marvel at God’s gifts of Love for us, for the baby we baptized today…AND to marvel and wonder at God’s divine, mysterious, generous, lavish plan for the redemption of all God’s creation. If we truly believe that none of us are an afterthought, that God holds all of us, that God’s end game is to draw us all into God’s hands, cradle us all in the loving hands of God… wow! What a reason to give God praise!

So our takeaway, our “go out into the world and do” from worship today is simply this: go and lose yourselves in the wonder of God’s gifts towards us and all creation. Think about how much a mindset of marveling at God’s love for all - how much it will change how we all interact with the world, the people we meet, our day to day lives, etc. Think about how much living a life filled with praise for God’s generous and lavish gifts of love - think about how much that will color every interaction we have. How our knowledge of God’s love for us - for them - for all - how our knowledge of God’s plan to redeem all creation, to hold us all in God’s hands…how it will change…everything.

May we be absolutely floored at these gifts of Love that God has given us. May we offer God praise and thanksgiving. And may they change everything for us, as beloved children of God held in God’s hands.

Amen.