Tuesday, November 26, 2019

December 1. 2019 Advent 1

Matt. 24:36-44 (The Message)

36 "But the exact day and hour? No one knows that, not even heaven's angels, not even the Son. Only the Father knows. 37 "The Arrival of the Son of Man will take place in times like Noah's. 38 Before the great flood everyone was carrying on as usual, having a good time right up to the day Noah boarded the ark. 39 They knew nothing - until the flood hit and swept everything away. 40 Two men will be working in the field - one will be taken, one left behind; 41 two women will be grinding at the mill - one will be taken, one left behind. 42 So stay awake, alert. You have no idea what day your Master will show up. 43 But you do know this: You know that if the homeowner had known what time of night the burglar would arrive, he would have been there with his dogs to prevent the break-in. 44 Be vigilant just like that. You have no idea when the Son of Man is going to show up.


It has said that “When we look at the past too much we become depressed or guilty.  When we look to the future too far, we become anxious; when we live in the present, we have less guilt or anxiety.”

Our text causes us to look to the future - perhaps too far - and can give us a good case of anxiety.  We are to be ready for what is to come.  To be on alert, which is both time consuming and emotionally draining.

However, Jesus words are meant to be a promise not a threat.  To warm our hearts not scare us into heaven.  For it is a Friend who is speaking,  a Friend who is coming.  We need not fear!  What a Friend we have in Jesus!

We are getting ready again to celebrate his coming.  We have no idea how he will appear, but stay awake, he will show up in human form again, and again, and again!



"Perhaps Christianity has more to do
with being redemptively human than being
superhumanly spiritual.  It involves the
conversion, not from human being to
spiritual hero, but from inhuman to human.
God will be known in and through our humanity."
William E. Peatman





Prayer thought for the week:  “Lord, help me to both see and be you in our humanity.”

Sunday, November 24, 2019

Nov. 24, 2019, Christ The King Sunday


Luke 23:33-43  (The Message)

33 When they got to the place called Skull Hill, they crucified him, along with the criminals, one on his right, the other on his left.
34-35 Jesus prayed, “Father, forgive them; they don’t know what they’re doing.”
Dividing up his clothes, they threw dice for them. The people stood there staring at Jesus, and the ringleaders made faces, taunting, “He saved others. Let’s see him save himself! The Messiah of God—ha! The Chosen—ha!”
36-37 The soldiers also came up and poked fun at him, making a game of it. They toasted him with sour wine: “So you’re King of the Jews! Save yourself!”
38 Printed over him was a sign: this is the king of the jews.
39 One of the criminals hanging alongside cursed him: “Some Messiah you are! Save yourself! Save us!”
40-41 But the other one made him shut up: “Have you no fear of God? You’re getting the same as him. We deserve this, but not him—he did nothing to deserve this.”
42 Then he said, “Jesus, remember me when you enter your kingdom.”
43 He said, “Don’t worry, I will. Today you will join me in paradise.”

What ever we say about Jesus and his Kingdom, however we try to understand the manifestation of power and glory which was his as the King who will reign wisely and do what is just and right; how ever much we are moved by the powerful words of the Hallelujah Chorus which shouts “King of Kings and Lord of Lords, forever!”   We are reminded today that Jesus Kingdom is not of this world and is not like anything else in this world.  It is not made up of that which makes up our kingdoms.  it is as different as night is from day.

For it is not a matter of power politics; nor of deceptive promises.  It is not a matter of domination and manipulation.  Jesus Kingdom is made up of compassion, kindness, gentleness, forgiveness, joy, peace and is found in places of weakness and foolishness, where the power and wisdom of God is revealed in all its power  and glory.

Robert MacAfee Brown relates the following life experience.

“The story is a true one.  It takes place on the roof of one of the crematoria at Birkenau, the death camp of Auschwitz, on a gray, cheerless day in the summer of 1979.

A group of us are standing on ruins the Germans tried (unsuccessfully) to obliterate, to hide evidence that six million Jews had been shot and gassed and burned in such places, solely because they were Jews.

I reflect: if Golgotha revealed the sense of God-forsakenness of one Jew, Birkenau multiplies that anguish at least three and a half million times.  For the rest of my life, this crematorium will represent the most powerful case against God;  the spot where one could - with justice-denounce, deny, or (worst of all) ignore God, the God who was silent.

On what use are words as such a time?  So many cried out to God at this spot and were not heard.  Human silence today seems the only appropriate response to divine silence yesterday.

We remain silent.  Our silence is deafening.

And then it comes - first from the lips of one man, Elie Wiesel (standing in the camp where thirty-fife years earlier his life and family and faith were destroyed), and then in a mounting chorus from others, mostly Jews, the great affirmation:



‘Shema Yisroel, Adonai Elohenu,
Adonai echod, Hear, O Israel,
the Lord our God, the Lord is One."








Prayer thought for the week:  “Lord, may your kingdom come this week, this day, this hour, in and through me your unworthy servant.”  Amen





Sunday, November 17, 2019

Nov. 17, 2019, 23rd Sunday After Pentecost

Luke 21: 5-19 (The Message)

5-6 One day people were standing around talking about the Temple, remarking how beautiful it was, the splendor of its stonework and memorial gifts. Jesus said, “All this you’re admiring so much—the time is coming when every stone in that building will end up in a heap of rubble.”
7 They asked him, “Teacher, when is this going to happen? What clue will we get that it’s about to take place?”
8-9 He said, “Watch out for the doomsday deceivers. Many leaders are going to show up with forged identities claiming, ‘I’m the One,’ or, ‘The end is near.’ Don’t fall for any of that. When you hear of wars and uprisings, keep your head and don’t panic. This is routine history and no sign of the end.”
10-11 He went on, “Nation will fight nation and ruler fight ruler, over and over. Huge earthquakes will occur in various places. There will be famines. You’ll think at times that the very sky is falling.
12-15 “But before any of this happens, they’ll arrest you, hunt you down, and drag you to court and jail. It will go from bad to worse, dog-eat-dog, everyone at your throat because you carry my name. You’ll end up on the witness stand, called to testify. Make up your mind right now not to worry about it. I’ll give you the words and wisdom that will reduce all your accusers to stammers and stutters.
16-19 “You’ll even be turned in by parents, brothers, relatives, and friends. Some of you will be killed. There’s no telling who will hate you because of me. Even so, every detail of your body and soul—even the hairs of your head!—is in my care; nothing of you will be lost. Staying with it—that’s what is required. Stay with it to the end. You won’t be sorry; you’ll be saved.


The American novelist F. Scott Fitzgerald once said:
“The test of first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in mind at the same time and still retain the ability to function.  One should, for example, be able to see that things are hopeless and yet be determined to make them better.”

This certainly is the mark of faith which often has to hope against hope and act in love in spite of all the hate.  This is what this text is all about.

It is about the faith which is sure of what it hopes for and certain of what it cannot see.
It is about the love which dares to bear all things, believe all things, hope all things,
endure all things.
It is about being witness to the truth in the face of evil and daring to believe that not a hair on our heads will perish.

 It is not the evil which shall prevail; it is faith in the goodness of God which will prevail!
Indeed, not a hair will perish of what God wants to preserve!





“Christ risen from the dead shows that
there is nothing rebellious creation
can do to cause something to perish
that God wants to preserve.”
Anonymous









Prayer thought for the week:  “Lord, help me to hang on when all seems hopeless.  Help me to trust Your endless love when all seems lost.  Amen”

Sunday, November 10, 2019

Nov, 10, 2019 22nd Sunday After Pentecost

Luke 20:27-38
  (The Message)
27-33 Some Sadducees came up. This is the Jewish party that denies any possibility of resurrection. They asked, “Teacher, Moses wrote us that if a man dies and leaves a wife but no child, his brother is obligated to take the widow to wife and get her with child. Well, there once were seven brothers. The first took a wife. He died childless. The second married her and died, then the third, and eventually all seven had their turn, but no child. After all that, the wife died. That wife, now—in the resurrection whose wife is she? All seven married her.”
34-38 Jesus said, “Marriage is a major preoccupation here, but not there. Those who are included in the resurrection of the dead will no longer be concerned with marriage nor, of course, with death. They will have better things to think about, if you can believe it. All ecstasies and intimacies then will be with God. Even Moses exclaimed about resurrection at the burning bush, saying, ‘God: God of Abraham, God of Isaac, God of Jacob!’ God isn’t the God of dead men, but of the living. To him all are alive.”

Jesus is running up against - again - the religious who were of a different kingdom.  They didn’t want him to be the final answer;  they wanted to be the final answer.  They wanted to keep God in the box of their own making, so God would not ask of them more than they were willing to give.  Jesus didn’t fit in their Kingdom!  He also didn’t answer their question because it was a worthless question.  He reminded them that God has to do with life. not death.  And we are to be to.

As was Mother Teresa, who didn’t fit for the ‘religious’ man who spoke these words when confronted with the possibility that Mother Teresa was close to what Jesus taught.
“Someone should tell Mother Teresa about triage.  In battle the medics don’t work on what they judge to be hopeless cases.  They work on the ones who have a chance to make it.  Mother Teresa is impractical.   Think how much better it would be if she helped people who were going to live and taught them a skill that would enable them to earn a living and maybe even help others.  She needs some business training.”




The Kingdom of God as seen in Jesus
(and those who follow him) is impractical.
Yet it is what Jesus was all about and what
we are to be all about -
being  merciful as our God is merciful!









Prayer thought for the week:  “Lord, help me to live in the right kingdom - your Kingdom on earth!”

Sunday, November 3, 2019

Nov. 3, 2019 , All Saints Sunday

Matthew 5:1-12 (NRSV)  The Beatitudes

5 When Jesus[a] saw the crowds, he went up the mountain; and after he sat down, his disciples came to him. 2 Then he began to speak, and taught them, saying:

3 “Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.
4 “Blessed are those who mourn, for they will be comforted.
5 “Blessed are the meek, for they will inherit the earth.
6 “Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they will be filled.
7 “Blessed are the merciful, for they will receive mercy.
8 “Blessed are the pure in heart, for they will see God.
9 “Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God.
10 “Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness’ sake, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.
11 “Blessed are you when people revile you and persecute you and utter all kinds of evil against you falsely on my account. 12 Rejoice and be glad, for your reward is great in heaven, for in the same way they persecuted the prophets who were before you.



All Saints Sunday has to do with our hearts.  “Blessed are the pure of heart, (those who have opened their hearts to the redeeming goodness of God’s love) for they will see God.”(  Matt. 5:8) And they will be a blessing.  It will be said of them “He/she had a good heart!”

Heart.  The word appears 872 times in the Bible.
It is an all inclusive word which captures all that we are and means everything we are, the very center our our being, the very soul of our existence.  In the O.T. as well as new and even today, “the ‘heart’ is at the center of a person’s motivations and actions.  It is the deepest fiber and sinew of the human will power”   John S. McClure

As Jesus says a bit further in the sermon on the Mount:
“The good person out of the good treasure of the heart produces good, and the evil person out of the evil treasure produces evil; for it is out of the abundance of the heart that the mouth speaks.”  Lk. 6:45

How is it with your heart?
Believe it or not, want it or not,  God would, through Word and Sacrament search us, cleanse us, call us, equip us, change us, enrich us, forgive us, so that from the heart we might “be merciful, just as (our God) is merciful.”  Mt. 6:36

It makes all the difference in the world when our hearts are turned towards God and God’s grace is at work in our hearts, taking the worst which happens to us and making it a blessing; and taking the best that happens to us and making that a blessing too, not just for us but for others too, who need to know they also are loved by God.

Then we are numbered with the Saints for a Saint is someone with a “good heart”.  A heart which has been captured by the awesome love of God!






“The heart has its reasons,
which reason does not know.”
Blaise Pascal








Prayer thought for the week:  “Purge my heart of evil and fill it with love so I too can be a blessing, and even a Saint!”