Sunday, March 27, 2022

March 27, 2022 Fourth Sunday in Lent

Luke 15:1-3, 11b-32  (The Message)

15 1-3 By this time a lot of men and women of doubtful reputation were hanging around Jesus, listening intently. The Pharisees and religion scholars were not pleased, not at all pleased. They growled, “He takes in sinners and eats meals with them, treating them like old friends.” Their grumbling triggered this story.

11-12 Then he said, “There was once a man who had two sons. The younger said to his father, ‘Father, I want right now what’s coming to me.’

12-16 “So the father divided the property between them. It wasn’t long before the younger son packed his bags and left for a distant country. There, undisciplined and dissipated, he wasted everything he had. After he had gone through all his money, there was a bad famine all through that country and he began to hurt. He signed on with a citizen there who assigned him to his fields to slop the pigs. He was so hungry he would have eaten the corncobs in the pig slop, but no one would give him any.

17-20 “That brought him to his senses. He said, ‘All those farmhands working for my father sit down to three meals a day, and here I am starving to death. I’m going back to my father. I’ll say to him, Father, I’ve sinned against God, I’ve sinned before you; I don’t deserve to be called your son. Take me on as a hired hand.’ He got right up and went home to his father.

20-21 “When he was still a long way off, his father saw him. His heart pounding, he ran out, embraced him, and kissed him. The son started his speech: ‘Father, I’ve sinned against God, I’ve sinned before you; I don’t deserve to be called your son ever again.’

22-24 “But the father wasn’t listening. He was calling to the servants, ‘Quick. Bring a clean set of clothes and dress him. Put the family ring on his finger and sandals on his feet. Then get a grain-fed heifer and roast it. We’re going to feast! We’re going to have a wonderful time! My son is here—given up for dead and now alive! Given up for lost and now found!’ And they began to have a wonderful time.

25-27 “All this time his older son was out in the field. When the day’s work was done he came in. As he approached the house, he heard the music and dancing. Calling over one of the houseboys, he asked what was going on. He told him, ‘Your brother came home. Your father has ordered a feast—barbecued beef!—because he has him home safe and sound.’

28-30 “The older brother stalked off in an angry sulk and refused to join in. His father came out and tried to talk to him, but he wouldn’t listen. The son said, ‘Look how many years I’ve stayed here serving you, never giving you one moment of grief, but have you ever thrown a party for me and my friends? Then this son of yours who has thrown away your money on whores shows up and you go all out with a feast!’


Luke 15 is one of the greatest chapters in the Bible.  It contains three parables which tell us all we need to know about God’s awesome love.  The parable of the Prodigal Son - or better titled, the Waiting Father,  is the most well known and profound.


The setting is the Pharisee’s and teachers of the Law - the prominent religious citizens of the day.  They have been unhappy with Jesus for not being as ‘religiously correct’ as they are, for “he receives sinners and eats with them.”  So Jesus tells this story to open their eyes to how it really is with God.


The rebellion of the youngest son is reason for the Father to disown him.  Cast him out!

Forget that he ever existed!  This the Father cannot do.  

There is no way God will disown any of his children!  That just isn’t in the books!  Not since Jesus!   God doesn’t close his heart to anyone - ever!


Upon his return, hoping to be a hired hand in his fathers house the younger son discovers the second great truth about God hidden in this story - he can’t be a hired son;  he can only be a son!  Love demands it!  Grace fulfills it!  He is a son again for love will have it no other way!    Indeed, ‘love so amazing, so divine, demands our life, our soul, our all.”


The elder son stayed home. As Bailey says in “The Cross And The Prodigal”,  “His heart is full of envy, pride, bitterness, sarcasm, anger, resentment, self-centeredness, hate, stinginess, self-satisfaction and self-deception.  And he probably sees his own actions as a righteous search for honor.”


It was his job to serve as ‘head waiter’ at the banquet.  This he could not do.  So the Father must go out a second time to try show his elder son that he is love too - just as much as the younger.  This time it ends up with his love being rejected.


Lesson:  Whenever we, like the elder son, get arrogant and think we know how, who and when God should love, we become lost in our own arrogance and way off base in our lack of compassion.

When ever we find ourselves begrudging God’s generosity - God’s grace at work in the lives of sinners - we part company with God and dwell in our own religiosity.


How great indeed is our God and his great loved for all - ALL - his children.  





“Grace isn’t a gift for getting it right  

but for getting it wrong!”  

Richard Rohr










Prayer thought for the week:  “Lord, if I stray help me to dare believe that you will welcome me home, again, and again, and again.  And when I think you love me because I never stray - at least not much - help me to see how far astray I really am.”










Sunday, March 20, 2022

March 20, 2022 Third Sunday in Lent

 Luke 13: 6-9  (The Message)

6-7 Then he told them a story: “A man had an apple tree planted in his front yard. He came to it expecting to find apples, but there weren’t any. He said to his gardener, ‘What’s going on here? For three years now I’ve come to this tree expecting apples and not one apple have I found. Chop it down! Why waste good ground with it any longer?’

8-9 “The gardener said, ‘Let’s give it another year. I’ll dig around it and fertilize, and maybe it will produce next year; if it doesn’t, then chop it down.’”


Whatever else this parable is about, it is about grace - God’s grace.


We have only once place to stand in this parable - we are the barren fig tree.  And the meaning is that no matter what, God is first, last and always a God of grace; “whose love will over rule his anger and whose mercy is stronger then her logic.”


"Praise God!  Everything doesn't happen for a reason.  Shout hallelujah!  What goes around doesn't come around.  The holy gardener looks on the unfruitfulness of the church and the unfruitfulness of the world and says, 

it's not a lost case yet.  Let's give it another chance.”  E. Susan Bond 


Amen!  And again I say, AMEN!



“God never lets us go;            

God never lets us down; 

God never lets us off.” 

        John A. Redhead'







Prayer thought for the week:  “Lord, thanks for giving me another chance,

and another, and another, until by your grace I do get it right.”




Thursday, March 10, 2022

March 13, 2021 Second Sunday in Lent

Luke 13:34 (The Message)

“Jerusalem, Jerusalem, killer of prophets, abuser of the messengers of God!  How often I’ve longed to gather your children, gather your children like a hen,  Her brood safe under her wings—but you refused and turned away!”


Jesus wept over Jerusalem because they would not let him love them as God would love them.  Jesus weeps today for all of us who don’t want to be loved that much.


God wants to love us more then we want to be loved.

God wants his love to be a living power and passion in our lives, sustaining us when we are down, challenging us when we are off course, directing us when we are confused and loving us into joyful obedience and hopeful servant hood, no matter what.


We don’t want that!

It is scary to be loved by God that much, for it “demands our life our soul our all.”  It means I can no longer play at being religious; I have to mean it. 

 



“How often I’ve longed to gather     

your children, gather your 

children like a hen,  Her 

brood safe under her wings.”

Jesus






Prayer thought for the week:  “Lord, let your love move me beyond just being religious, to being a loving servant in how I live.   Amen”







Sunday, March 6, 2022

March 6, 2022 First Sunday in Lent

Luke 4:1-13  (The Message)

 1-2 Now Jesus, full of the Holy Spirit, left the Jordan and was led by the Spirit into the wild. For forty wilderness days and nights he was tested by the Devil. He ate nothing during those days, and when the time was up he was hungry.

3 The Devil, playing on his hunger, gave the first test: “Since you’re God’s Son, command this stone to turn into a loaf of bread.”

4 Jesus answered by quoting Deuteronomy: “It takes more than bread to really live.”  5-7 For the second test he led him up and spread out all the kingdoms of the earth on display at once. Then the Devil said, “They’re yours in all their splendor to serve your pleasure. I’m in charge of them all and can turn them over to whomever I wish. Worship me and they’re yours, the whole works.”

8 Jesus refused, again backing his refusal with Deuteronomy: “Worship the Lord your God and only the Lord your God. Serve him with absolute single-heartedness.”  9-11 For the third test the Devil took him to Jerusalem and put him on top of the Temple. He said, “If you are God’s Son, jump. It’s written, isn’t it, that ‘he has placed you in the care of angels to protect you; they will catch you; you won’t so much as stub your toe on a stone’?”

12 “Yes,” said Jesus, “and it’s also written, ‘Don’t you dare tempt the Lord your God.’”

13 That completed the testing. The Devil retreated temporarily, lying in wait for another opportunity.l


Jesus is ready to take on the world and all that needs changing therein.  He knew God better then any mortal before him, and was more ready to do God’s will then anyone had ever been.


And yet, he is still temptable.

The battle with evil begins at the moment he is sure he is the One sent of God.


It is the temptation to take the easy way out.  To sell his soul for a bite of bread.

We too are tempted to think that we can live by bread alone.


It is the temptation to believe that the end does justify the means - idolatry is okay if it is for the right reason. I can keep my faith separate from the rest of my life, bowing to God on Sunday and doing what I have to do to make it the rest of the time.


It is the temptation to prove God’s goodness by trying to control what God does - by thinking we can be in charge of God’s miracles.


No!  No! No!  Our faith is to lead us to do justice, love kindness and walk humbly with our God”   (Micah 6:8)  Nothing less is enough. 




“The greatest temptations are not those that solicit our consent to obvious sin, 

but those that offer us great evils masking 

as the greatest goods.” 

Thomas Merton








Prayer thought for the week:  "Lord, when I face the temptations of life, help me to keep my mind and heart focused on what really counts - doing justice, loving kindness and walking humbly with You."  Amen