Friday, April 28, 2023

“ May God bless you with Fearlessness and Courage ”

Easter is not for the faint of heart.  By now, you’ve heard about the earthquakes, the bodies of the dead that came back to life and began wandering around the city, that Jesus was dead …until he wasn’t, the rumors of phantoms, and the Messiah, the political intrigue, the uncertainty about the future …RESURRECTION is always unsettling and unpredictable.  It’s never quite “settled” because basically—you just never know what’s going to happen next or come of it!  And when Jesus is raised from death to life, we’re not just supposed to believe it’s true.  That is, the “good news” is more than, “He is risen!” or even more than personal salvation.  Easter is about a life that triumphs over death. 

In a recent interview online, one of my colleagues offered a blessing that I believe is perfect for Easter people: 

“May God bless you with fearlessness and courage!” 

Such a blessing reminds me that Easter isn’t just a date on the calendar; nor is it a matter of becoming familiar with the unfamiliar details of the story.  Because Jesus is raised—this changes our reality! 

If Jesus is risen, “death” is no longer the end, but a new beginning.  If Jesus is risen, the triumph is not that of the empire or of the religious leaders out for their own power.  If Jesus is risen, rather than simply trying to prove it, or believing it—what does this mean for our lives and for our world? 

Jesus is risen.  This is a decisive act on God’s part.  God not only created the world but stakes a claim to the people and things that live in it.  It means that the “end” is not in doubt but is found in God who is the beginning and the end. 

Jesus is risen.  So, we live in a world that is on its way to becoming what God wills, even if, in the meantime, it’s hard to tell who or what is really winning.  Jesus is risen means God has won. 

Jesus is risen.  So, we are people of resurrection, too.  We are given opportunities to transform the lives of others by this truth that transforms us.  Rather than people who sit on the sidelines, biding our time until the end—we can take up the causes of Christ in the world and bring the Kingdom of God closer, and closer.  For God to bless us with fearlessness and courage means to activate us. 

Easter is not something we observe, celebrating for a day or even a season.  Rather Easter is something that we do, or even become.  A resurrected life takes root in the life that is coming, rather than simply clinging to what we have known.  A resurrected life finds hope in the possibility that the whole world is being saved, is being transformed, is being made new—and we are a part it.  A resurrected life allows us to take up our journey in new ways, to include others, to be freed from what has been.  God blesses us with fearlessness and courage because Easter isn’t for the faint of heart! 

God is winning.  The news headlines don’t see that, yet.  God’s winning never sells.  What it does do is give us life …again and again.  Life is coming.  If you haven’t seen it yet, get ready.  Life is coming, God has said so.  Death and resurrection are just the beginning. 


Thursday, March 30, 2023

"Sleeping on Golgotha"

For the April newsletter 


One of my favorite memories from a pilgrimage to the Holy Land in 2009 was the reality that I got to sleep beside Golgotha.  No one realized this, as our group arrived to Jerusalem “at night,” which meant we were unable to recognize the landmarks in the darkness.  It seemed a little bit like Nicodemus going to visit Jesus “at night” [the gospel lesson for the second Sunday in Lent this year]; and the next morning, we discovered that our hotel was next door to a Jerusalem city bus depot. 

As we were invited to walk to our day’s first appointment, some of us noticed a particular rock formation behind a row of buses in the back portion of the bus lot, which was directly adjacent to our hotel.  Within a couple of blocks’ walk, we arrived at the Garden Tomb, the primary site in Jerusalem where Jesus is said to have been buried.  And when you visit the Garden Tomb, they show you this photograph …taken by a British citizen in the 1800’s. 

In the nearly 2,000 years since, the landscape has changed; time, replete with wind, rain, earthquakes, and other things has transformed what once was.  The picture below is what you can see directly from the bus depot.  On the right, just out of the frame, is the observation point from the Garden tomb; on the left, just out of the frame, is the Golden Arms Hotel …where we slept.  The British

docents explain how the site has been continuously in their care since the early part of the 19th century, and how this was one of the most prominent locales along the route into Jerusalem.  The explanation makes total sense, even if you hold a somewhat skeptical view.  And …it would mean that I was sleeping beside Golgotha. 


  I was instantly excited!  Sleeping beside Golgotha seemed like it should be a big deal.  But …what does it mean?  That I had some kind of affinity with Jesus’ death?  I wouldn’t want to sleep in the room next to the electric chair or the “death chamber;” why was I giddy beside Golgotha?  But in the end, “nothing unexpected” happened.  There were no signs or visions from God; there wasn’t any sudden realization I didn’t have before, just a deeper sense of peace amidst a world full of distractions and catastrophes—that “God’s got this” and “God’s got me.” 

As the month of April begins we’re counting down the last days of Lent.  To me, there’s a place of scarred earth that remains a silent witness to Jesus’ death.  It’s where Christians for centuries have drawn strength from the stories that surround those last days for Jesus, because we know God’s promised pathway is …dying and rising.  For Jesus, yes; but also for us. 

Friends, we know where this story is going; and we know that the cross and death is not the ending.  Like Jesus, we are all of us dying to what was …and rising into something new.  This is the promise of God’s story that is new every morning in and with and for each one of us.  Jesus offers us real change—of hearts, of minds, in life!  What has been, doesn’t have to forever.  It’s possible to leave some things behind and be transformed.  We can do this.  God can help. 

So, as we come again to this sacred story in a season of sacred time …let us be confident that God still holds our stories, and us.  And that what is coming next may not be entirely expected, but God has already promised to meet us there.  In the meantime …rest well.  

Saturday, January 28, 2023

" Looking Back, Faith Forward "


I’m enjoying the new “view” out of the windows of my “new to me” pastor’s study.  I’ve especially found myself thinking about what it may have looked like, seeing the tops of the steamboats against the treetops on the far side of the river, across from downtown Camden nearly a century-and-a-half ago.  Since then, of course, many things have changed. 

Still, some things “feel” the same.  My first call in ordained ministry was serving two small congregations in the middle of Nebraska, separated by about 30 miles.  So, driving up from El Dorado to Camden almost “feels normal,” hearkening back to experiences formed early in my ministry.  It was early on in my ministry in Nebraska that I visited nearby Fort Hartstuff, a state historical park, to take the tour of the fort used briefly in the late 1800’s (AFTER the Civil War).  We walked out of one of the buildings and the tour guide pointed out a row of trees along the river in the far distance:

“See those trees along the river in the distance? …Yeah.  None of those were here when the fort was built—all the wood had to be brought from more than 40 miles away.” 

She also reminded us that the whole landscape looked different now than it once had—because of those trees!  They weren’t there …back in the day! 

In 2009, I had a similar experience standing on the shoreline of the Sea of Galilee in Israel.  While we wanted to believe we were walking in the footsteps of Jesus, the iconic shoreline was filled with the reminders that times were different.  Not only was the shoreline surprisingly littered with some used tires and obvious trash, but the tour guides reminded us over and over how the shoreline has been affected by heavy water use in modern times, dramatically altering the “look” and location of shoreline itself. 

…Despite this, almost always, it’s easier to tell where we’ve been; it’s hard to impossible, knowing what’s going to be. 

Many factors shape our physical landscapes over time: weather, human activity, environmental changes, adaptations, new technologies, necessities.  …But what about our faith? 

The Epiphany is often considered to be the last celebration of the Christmas season; but “epiphanies” happen all the time.  An epiphany is a revealing of God—think Moses and the burning bush, or the Pillar of Cloud in the escape from Egypt, or Jesus brining the Kingdom of God to bear in the world.  The Epiphany was the visit of the Magi to see Jesus.  But there are many places where we know God is present in our lives—even now. 

So how is our faith and faithfulness shaping not only “our inner,” spiritual worlds—but the outer world around us?  How are you watching for God, every day?  Not only, how you’re being shaped and reshaped by faith; but how is your faith reshaping the world you live in?  How is it making other’s lives different?  How is it recreating the landscape and reshaping the view? 

All this, is what God invites us to participate in from the very beginning, uttering “Let there be light.”  Ever since then, God has invited us to participate in making the world God’s good creation. 

…God has shown us what is good.  Time for us to move the world!  Come be a part of what God is doing! 

Friday, November 18, 2022

A Manifesto For Me: David Stipp-Bethune

 This was an assignment of "The Art of Transitional Ministry" Week 2 Class I took in the fall of 2022.  
 

In the American film, “Little Big Man,” several of the recurring characters flirt with death through much of the movie, though one disaster and then another.  In one of the penultimate scenes, the old chief decides that he will die.  In his final accounting for his life he says:


  • Thank you for making me a human being.
  • Thank you for helping me to become a warrior.
  • Thank you for my victories, and for my defeats.
  • Thank you for my vision, and for my blindness by which I saw further.
  • You make all things, and direct them in their ways; and now, you have decided that the human beings will soon walk a road …that leads nowhere.
  • I am going to die now, unless death wants to fight, and I ask you for the last time to grant me my old power to make things happen.

 

And he lays down to die. 

…except he doesn’t.  After a few moments he asks, “am I still in this life?” 

Yes. 

“I was afraid of that,” he says.  “Sometimes the magic works and sometimes, it doesn’t.” 

~   ~   ~   ~

 

None of us gets to choose what cross we are crucified upon. 

I’m still glad to be here.  

And to have choices about how to spend my time. 

I believe that all of life is God’s gift. 

I believe that God is with us, close to us, everywhere around us, and invites into building the world God imagines. 

I believe God is always, already, creatively, and redemptively present. 

I believe that sometimes, the only visible, knowable presence of God, might be in or a part of me. 

I believe God has the power to write and rewrite our stories.  I believe God shares this power with us, inviting us to give and love and create as God does. 

I believe God can use every everything for good. 

I believe I am my best self when I am inspired by God’s vision, courageous enough to try and help give life to God’s vision in the world around me, and willing to accept the opportunities to spend my time in doing the things of God. 

I believe that God provides enough of whatever is needed. 

I believe that gratitude can help us sort challenges for the better. 

I believe Jesus is the embodiment of fulfilling God’s vision and giving it away. 

I believe everything can be God’s gift; and that everything can be given again, by us. 

I believe life leads to something else; that God has said death never has the last word. 

I believe we can fulfill what God intends. 

I believe we can transform the world, when it isn’t God’s vision; and that we are being transformed. 

I believe I don’t always get it right.  I believe others don’t always get it right.  I believe the best assumption is that we are all trying our best. 

I believe when we trust God, even if the road were to lead to nowhere, we are never lost or left behind. 

I believe God is generous, hopeful, gracious, and kind—all things we should emulate. 

None of us gets to choose what cross we are crucified upon. 

I’m still glad to be here.  

And to have choices about how to spend my time. 

Thursday, September 15, 2022

“ Living on the Corner of Gratitude and Joy ”

I don’t know the appropriate way to say this online.  People need to know …but it’s kind of like leaving bad news on an answering machine, I know—so I’m just going to say it. 

 

My mom died this past Tuesday. 

 

Since so many of my friends and colleagues are online and so many of you have been a part of her journey and our journeys as of late, especially—it seemed appropriate, if not urgent to say it out loud here.  Mom died on Tuesday. 

If this seems odd, I confess I have sometimes struggled with the appropriate conventions of news-telling.  Mom’s answer, in times of need, was always to call the police, and task them with finding someone in order to deliver urgent news (ask dad about the APB she had out on him after he left for a meeting).  That’s not exactly how I like to operate, so in my first call, when answering machines were somewhat new, when I kept coming home to a series of “clicks” which I knew to be someone calling but “hanging up,” and learning that ladies in my congregation felt it improper to ever leave “bad news” as a recorded message, I took matters into my own hands and made an announcement during Church the next Sunday:

“Some of you are apparently afraid to leave word that someone’s died on my answering machine.  But please do!  I don’t mind, I won’t find it odd, and I won’t hold it against you; but you will probably be unhappy if you schedule a funeral, and the preacher doesn’t show up!  All you have to do is wait for the beep and say, “Hi David, its me.  Please call me back.” 

That very next week, someone did just exactly that.  They called, and after the beep was this: “Hi David, it’s me.  Please call me back.”  …And for a moment there was much rejoicing!  My plan had worked!  They did exactly what I said! 

Oh dear!  …and it took me not quite an hour to figure out I had no idea who “it’s me” was! 

So, in another week, we got that fixed; too.  In the meantime, the Funeral Director was all business—“Hi David, this is Jeff over at the funeral home, Jean Upshaw died and the family would like to know if the funeral could be scheduled for the 16th at 11am at the church.”  

 

My mom died on Tuesday.  And for much of the ten days prior, she was almost always accompanied by my dad, my sister, and me.  We observed together that this was one of the hardest things; and yet, somehow, one of the best things. 

I’m sad that my mother’s voice is no longer in this world.  I am.  And like the winners of “Wait! Wait! Don’t tell me,” I wish I could still have her voice on my answering machine!  But I’ve found myself now moved to the corner of Gratitude Street and Joy Avenue in a way that was unimaginable to me, before.  Even as a child of God and a child of two church-going and church-leading parents whose spent his whole life in the arms of ministry, I’m not sure I could have known it the way I do now.  I’ve had no trouble believing and proclaiming it, sharing the news with so many …of death and resurrection, an end to suffering, the certainty of God’s love—trying to speak some of the things I’m now feeling—I’d just never truly known how fully these feelings overcome whatever measure of unknowing or un-assuredness we all seem to carry about death, or the sadness we fear will forever accompany us, too, in the way I’ve experienced it, now. 

We had hoped against hope that skilled medical care could release mom from her bondage to ailments over these last few weeks.  We presumed, some time ago that another trip to the emergency room surely led to restoration, or at least a different form of still life’s journey in this world.  And it was a shock to my being that after weeks of wearing the path to “better” out, hearing that mom admitted out loud that she was dying.  I still don’t know what you’re supposed to feel when a parent or a loved one says, “I’m dying.”  Let alone, what you’re supposed to say back.  I just know it sucks the wind out of your sails. 

In one moment the other day mom woke up from sleeping; when I asked her how she was, she said, “I don’t know yet Day-day, I’ve been asleep.”  I waited a bit, before asking again, and she began, “I thought I was dead!”  I’m still thinking about what I might have said different, but what spilled out of my mouth was, “are you pissed off then?”  “Boy I tell you what,” (which was one of her sayings) she said …but never quite finished her thought. 

By then, mom was spending a lot of her time sleeping.  We had learned after days of trying uncover what had gone awry in her body that at least part of her unrelenting nausea was caused by gastritis we hadn’t known about.  She’d been suffering with it so long, she’d almost stopped eating before she was presented with only the hospital food.  Not only did things not taste good anymore, but she had unpredictable bouts of throwing up after eating or drinking, and none of the tips, tricks, or pharmacological remedies seemed to give her food or drink that blessed one-way ticket.  As time wore on against her, her lack of energy was no match for what she faced; and it was marked by conversations more shortened, between longer times of sleeping. 

Once, my dad asked if she was feeling better.  “Much better,” she replied, and with some certainty.  She said, “I’ve learned that God loves me so much more.” 

Dad was devastated.  Later he said, “How could she not know God loved her?  This woman, growing up in a strong Lutheran family, it’s my fault she even became a Presbyterian …she did that for me, but still, how could she not know….”  “No,” I said, “you didn’t hear her.  …So much more, dad.”  So much more.  “Not unloved, just more than she thought.  It’s good.  Even better.” 

On Tuesday morning, she was even brightened.  “How are you feeling, Mom?”  “So much better than the other night, when I thought I was dying!” she said.  As if issuing a decree of reversing course.  

It had seemed to me that mom had been taking little trips, like a toddler who slips the comfortable boundaries of the parent, who gets to the edge and looks back to see if she’d gone too far.  And each successive trip seemed to be a little farther.  And then, almost as if she knew two places that were both good to be, or maybe she kept coming back to make sure WE were O.K. 

And I believe I know the moment when she left us, slipping the shackles of her broken body, leaving us the reminder that it was no longer needed or required, and only her mortality traveled with us, from there.  But she, like Jesus we’re told, was gone. 

For so many days before I had described Hope as an unruly woman (that’s my polite language) as dragging and kicking us where we did not want to go; but in the end it was indeed and unruly Hope introducing us each to gratitude and joy.  My dad told us that he had awakened on Tuesday brokenhearted because mom’s spirit would be no more in this world.  But he had realized when he saw mom again, that this wasn’t true—rather, in particular each of us, and also others had been given her spirit and that she had been teaching us her whole life, preparing us …even for hard things.  “Always try your best,” mom told me—even with things you don’t know how to do.” 

Somehow, all the lasts of everything had not led us to feel empty or our loss; rather, we found in ourselves completeness, and abundant gratitude for what we had received.  We were not empty, at all; but filled.  We were not walking with sadness only, but hand in hand with joy.  And deeply, deeply, grateful to God. 

But it began leaking out in funny ways. 

We were in the middle of dinner, or nearly, when mom began breathing her last.  And you have to know, that most of my life—even the last day I was with mom at her house—that most every time the phone would ring, mom would always announce her “fake phone answer.”  Ring-ring.  And mom would say, “Stipp’s Mortuary.  You stab ‘em we slab ‘em.”  …And almost always when we were in the middle of eating dinner!  Then she’d pick up the receiver and say, “Stipp’s residence.” 

The nurse came and asked if we had a funeral home.  We said, “yes” without snickering.  When we were asked to call them, my sister said to my dad, “I’ll call them, but YOU have to tell me what to say.”  But I said, “you already know what to say, don’t you.  …Tell them, ‘Mortuary, this is the Stipp’s.  We stabbed her, you slab her!” 

But that was only after my perfect brother-in-law, had shown up with dinner.  Mom wasn’t supposed to have been dead yet.  Apparently, it was enough to see that the table was set.  And in the bag, were cookies from the bakery.  Yes.  Already.  You know it!  Halloween-themed …tombstones and ghosts.  #momgone



We ate them in celebration.  And my sisters says, if we weren’t already all going to hell, we sure are now! 


And I suppose, the day may come when I find not just comfort and joy playing pleasantly in my backyard, but that I’ll surely discover the sting of death has creeped over the fence unwantedly to scare the serenity out of my beautiful garden.  But like I trust we will see her again, my voice says gladly, “Not yet!”  My smile is not painted on over sadness—no, it’s real; and this feeling of gratitude seems deep and abiding. 

Oh, I suspect I may vacation now and again, but I’m now living at the corner of Gratitude and Joy; and somehow, I’ll always find my way home. 

 

I do hope you can come visit.  And I’ve heard from someone just recently on good authority …there’s room in the subdivision for you, too. 

 

 

Monday, September 12, 2022

Preaching on the 14th Sunday After Pentecost, Sunday, September 11, 2022

I was preaching again, at the Presbyterian Church of Ruston this week. You can hear the scripture lessons read, plus my sermon entitled, “I have spoken, I have purposed; I have not relented nor will I turn back” BY CLICKING HERE.  

Friday, September 9, 2022

“ I’m Saving Room for the Ice Cream ”

This photo is from the summer of 2018.  It needs a little context, though.   

I was at my parents' house.  It was the morning of a presbytery meeting that I was moderating, for which the co-moderator of the General Assembly was also going to be present.  And after that, I was leaving immediately to fly to Montreat for a youth conference.  

 Mom made sure I had breakfast.  A task that became a constant in both of our lives for a majority of them. 

I don't have a breakfast table picture from my childhood, but if I had one, it would be mostly similar (yes, that's a more than 40-year-old cake pan with the biscuits in it).  

In my childhood especially, I grew up with mom making breakfast every morning; and when I grew into not wanting to eat breakfast, mom made me milkshakes …for breakfast.  I tell you this because a friend of mine just admitted online to taking his kids to the grocery story at 9:30 at night to get ice cream—something his parents never did for him.  So, I’m bragging bit when I tell you that MY mom made me milkshakes with the ice cream always on hand in our freezer FOR BREAKFAST because she wanted me to eat!  [A famous comedian once bragged about feeding his kids chocolate cake for breakfast.  #HeHadNoIdea] 

Mom never pushed food on people.  Wait!  She was always insisting that we were having supper at 3:30 in the afternoon because that was enough time to get home from school, and dad could come home from work, and a window of time just large enough to allow mere minutes (or seconds!) in which to put food in our mouths—which constituted a full blown meal in mom’s terms—before the requisite leaving for meetings and activities and what-ever-else in creation we were doing.  Mom and dad somehow believed the meal table was important, and though it might not last long, and “nothing” ever really happened save the forcing of food down your gullet …mom could testify, should that somehow ever be necessary, that “we were at least together.” 

Proof of life apparently could mean being able to say you saw your family at supper, if all else failed. 

Because she had nourished us, at least, and we’ve always lived to tell about it, long into adulthood now, Mom still likes it most when in the course of the busiest of lives, she and my dad, can be at table with my sister and me, my children and hers, my spouse and hers, and we can all eat something ...together.  …In the same room.  …At the same time.  Even if it elapses in what would best be counted in seconds.  …Because somehow, at least we can all testify that we saw each other, and that constituted being together …and in any world, that’s important.  …And I can't remember the last time Mom was able to pull that off.  

In all honesty, in the busy-ness of life we all grew capable and used to fighting her off—not being willing participants because, well, someone always has something. 

So, with all the *stuff* we all bring or brought to that table, the last time, it damn sure wasn’t to last longer than the last fast sermon you heard preached on a Sunday morning when more needful things needed to happen.  I know it wouldn’t have taken any longer than a qualifying lap for the Indianapolis 500, either …and mom would have been happy …because apparently, it counted if only you were all together for it to happen. 

Which might say something as to why I can’t remember. 

The last time I think mom had a real meal was around Father's Day, this year—and we just passed Labor Day, now.  She's been plagued by all kinds of infections and ill-feeling-ness, and mostly an unrelenting nausea that's been present in some ways for years, now. Among other things, we think years of treating rheumatoid arthritis have taken toll from her kidneys, and her stuff is no longer a match for what keeps coming at her.  In most recent days, she can't or doesn't want to eat now ...and somehow, that's not like mom—who has always never quite been able to wait for the prayer to be said before she starts tasting what's on the table; I guess, from always being on the run to something, or her family was.  Bless her, she still brings that same spirit when the meal tray comes, but the act of eating seems to be also like an act of betrayal.  

 I don't know how much longer my mom's voice will remain part of this world. ...But last Friday was the first Friday of this fresh school year where everyone else in my nuclear family could barely get home and “suited up” for the next thing, before each had something to be gone fore.  A school football game (the first of the senior year),  and someone plays in the band, and someone worked in the concession stand, and friends.... So the door flung open, time after time with familiar refrains: "Are we gonna eat before, or after?" "I won't have time to get ready!" "Will there be supper, or are we just snacking?" and our school teacher with a commute barely even got here! 

I didn't know what I was doing at the time …urgently running to the grocery to get in supplies and throwing together a “meal” that would “fit.”  But, with effort and energy there was a meal—and fast-eaten, too.  It must have been important because I was bent to make it happen.  There were home-comings, and eating; there was a sending, and a returning.  They came.  We ate.  They went.  They came back.  And even at 10:30, or by then, after 11—we were polishing the leftovers and pushing down ice cream.  Because ice cream doesn’t have hours, you know, it simply just is! 

Actually, Mom might even be to the point of passing on ice cream now; though I can't imagine it.  But it won't be a betrayal, mom.  I promise.  

I don't know what the next hours or days hold.  I've been saying for several weeks that "Hope is being a rather unruly woman (those are my polite words)” just now.  Unruly and kicking hard like a stubborn mule at times, dragging me where I think I don't want to go.  The prayers and thoughts of so many have carried us upon what have been rough waters; and we have even dared to ask for calm seas.  Yet it's during that rough waters that Hope gains her value, because there and then, it is the one of God who is God, takes again the chaos of the moment and says enough of this.  I don't know what the miracle is to be, only that it is long-promised and not in doubt.  Hope rocks because life is a journey ...and we are not alone.  

I didn't eat breakfast today—sometimes old habits die hard—but it was an act of betrayal.  Or solidarity.  It's no way to go out into the world, I know.  Let’s just say I’m saving room for the ice cream.  


Thursday, July 14, 2022

I was told there was a basket ...

Where I live in South Arkansas these latter days have been hot—hotter than normal.  Just a degree or two here or there, but we’re breaking record high temperatures.  So, in the last couple of weeks especially, I’ve been fond of sharing this meme a friend posted online:

More than a summer excessive heat warning, I think my friend was responding to the state of the world—you know “…going somewhere in a hand basket!”  Just a taste of our reality are the wars, and rumors of wars.  Violence, and repeated reports of gun violence.  There were more than 50 people discovered, attempting to flee desperation and avoid immigration, who had succumbed to conditions while traveling in an 18-wheeler trailer a few weeks back, near San Antonio, Texas.  If you’ve been paying any attention at all to headline news, each day of reporting from the January 6th Special Congressional Committee hearings in congress revealed details of events that many find horrifying (it’s one thing to suspect some form of malfeasance, but another thing to come face to fact with it in the details of witness testimony that even our worst fears about everything were tragically realized and exceeded!).  Rising gas prices have caused some to scuttle vacation plans; and thinking about uncontrolled inflation is nightmarish. 

 In our world with disparaging realities, in this coming Sunday’s lectionary reading, the prophet Amos has an equally belittling and seemingly vilifying word …that also comes in a basket:

"This is what the Lord GOD showed me-a basket of summer fruit.  [God] said, "Amos, what do you see?" And I said, "A basket of summer fruit." Then the LORD said to me, The end has come upon my people Israel; I will never again pass them by.  The songs of the temple shall become wailings in that day," says the Lord GOD; "the dead bodies shall be many, cast out in every place.  Be silent!"  Hear this, you that trample on the needy, and bring to ruin the poor of the land, saying, "When will the new moon be over so that we may sell grain; and the sabbath, so that we may offer wheat for sale? We will make the ephah small and the shekel great, and practice deceit with false balances, buying the poor for silver and the needy for a pair of sandals, and selling the sweepings of the wheat."  --Amos 8: 1-6

 

I wonder …what do you put in YOUR basket of summer fruit? 

Many of us have ideas about the changes we think or believe are necessary for our lives, and for the world …to be better.  But Amos’ words point at our lack …of ending the trampling of the needy and bringing ruin the poor of the land. 

 

One of my friends (actually, she’s someone I only know through her writing and speaking—Nadia Bolz-Weber) spoke or wrote this: 

“People don’t leave Christianity because they stop believing in the teachings of Jesus.  People leave Christianity because they believe in the teachings of Jesus so much they can’t stomach being part of an institution that claims to be about that but clearly isn’t.” 

My church, the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), has been losing membership throughout my whole entire lifetime.  And I wish I could say it was for good and altruistic reasons that Nadia is pointing to, and not the basket of summer fruit that Amos is laying down.  I think that despite our best efforts, just like people who have gone before us, just like Jesus’ disciples, just like Israel or Judah—we lose focus on what we are supposed to have been about and we lose focus on each other.  I love my Church.  But the desperate life we find ourselves living in these days has us grasping at straws—trying to still be people atop the world. 

We long for what we experienced years ago, when we thought we had it all; only the prophet reminds us with a basket of summer fruit that despite our best efforts, we continue acting like people are expendable rather than believing they are people God loves, claims, and redeems.  Maybe not all of us, always; but sometimes, and we all take our turns.  

This season, this pandemic, this wrestling with the ways of the world preys on our fear and reminds us of what we have lost. 

It always sounds healing to aim at reversing the trends—to regain our membership and bolster our resources.  

“This is ironic,” one of my other friends (who I don’t know in person but whose work and words I deeply respect) wrote this, this week: 

“This is ironic considering we are a church that is Reformed and always being Reformed, a group of people who say we worship the Risen Lord, a savior who was resurrected from the dead.  What have we to fear?  Not even death itself.  Surely, we can handle some restructuring.” 

 

Perhaps we should know this by now that our past is not our future.  That the world is constantly changing, that we are being changed.  (If for no other reason, we have every confidence that God is with us AND that God IS CHANGING US!)  We can’t control what happens to us.  We can’t go back.  …A basket of summer fruit has but a season. 

I believe that human beings are created in the image of God and that when Jesus was born into human form—when we look at each other, we are seeing God.  God so loved the world that God created us and gave us to each other.  If we’re going to change the desperateness in which we live, it starts with each of us …recognizing the face of God in one another. 

If I want to change the world, it begins with me. 

I wonder …not only what’s in your basket of fruit, but who you’re sharing yours with? 

These days we’re living desperately.  But into all the chaos God breathes hope.  These days will not last, we know, because we’re still breathing in them too. 

Sunday, July 10, 2022

Preaching on the 5th Sunday After Pentecost, Sunday, July 10, 2022

I was preaching again, at the Presbyterian Church of Ruston this week.  You can hear the scripture lessons read, plus my sermon entitled, “Our Desperation, Our Measure, and Our Doing” BY CLICKING HERE.  


Saturday, July 2, 2022

“ Prayers. Or, No Prayers ”

 I'm a PK (preacher's kid). When I was in high school, my preacher father was regularly invited to give the invocation before home football games using the PA system at the stadium. Of course, I took my share of ribbing from classmates whenever my father was announced to intone the prayer. High School is socially awkward; sometimes, your father offering public prayer can be even more awkward. But I distinctly remember ...a Friday night, home football game, when my father wasn't praying ...someone else's pastor offered the invocation ...during which the pastor prayed for the holiness of our nation, he mentioned Jesus and that we believed in Jesus, and then prayed that the enemy on the other side would fall injured by the wayside and our team would go on to victory.  

I confess. I cannot remember the exact words. But there has never been any doubt in my mind, or the minds of my friends at the time, that prayers were said, invoking God, and the outcome would involve injured players or persons on the other side of the stadium. And I was utterly embarrassed.  

My father, despite everything teenagers are want to say despairingly about their fathers, always prayed well. And through this other's fault, my dad got a huge status upgrade in my mind (and it shouldn't have taken something this awful).  

It was also the first time I realized or recognized my faith being weaponized.  

I can't imagine what it was like for the other football team, the other band, the other students, the other parents--across the field--labeled as enemies and threatened with injury. As I'm writing this, I'm trying to tell myself all the ways it surely didn't happen as I remember--that no one claiming to be a Christian could pray for someone else to fall injured, or surely I mis-heard and the pastor was referring to the devil or demonic forces to be injured instead of players or students from another school.  

I have willingly participated in the rituals of public prayer as a religious leader, myself. I have defended the opportunity to present public prayers on behalf of communities where I have served as a religious leader; but always holding to my belief that I (and others) needed to be responsible for practicing our faith(s) with great care for everyone and without harm to anyone. I've been joined on some occasions by persons of other faith traditions, and not just Christians. But could it be true that this is simply not possible?  

I suppose, since we have demonstrated an inability to do this well, I should be prepared to live in a world where prayers are no longer offered at football games, before NASCAR races, in the city council and school board chambers, and all the other places. Perhaps we deserve to to not have "in God we trust" printed on our money and to have "Jesus is my co-pilot" bumper stickers banned, too--for the common good. ...But I do believe, somehow, our world would be the worse for it.  

And yet, it might just be worth it, to not have one more ya-hoo praying for people to fall injured by the wayside.

I just don't know how people, who claim to know and love Jesus, can ever get the idea, that Jesus is happy when we pray for others to be victimized in some way. I don't know why we believe Jesus is honored, respected, or glorified, by our insistence that our religious privilege should be to disparage anyone, ever. I don't know why, supposed bible-believing people, can ever believe that human beings are anything other than beloved people of God--in whose image we are created. And how we can see ourselves as "better" than others because we claim to have a personal relationship with God?

 

In our eye for an eye world, the suffering is endless.

 

When we believe ourselves to be better than others, the suffering is endless.

 

I believe Jesus is calls true believers out of this suffering, by changing how we see ourselves, by changing how we see God, by changing how we see others.

 

 

Prayers.  Or, no prayers.