Colorful: Me

Note: You can watch this teaching on CrossWalk’s YouTube channel.

            Why this series, why now?  February holds several important distinctions that most of us are aware of.  Valentine’s Day reminds us to show love to the most important people in our lives, and in grade school, a little love for every kid in class with a cheap little card.  Also celebrates Presidents Day in honor of two very different US presidents: Washington and Lincoln.  And, for the purposes of this series, February is Black History Month.  As a Jesus follower, I am invited to follow in Jesus’ way of life, which is founded on an understanding of God being known primarily by love which then leads to us viewing and treating all people from a loving stance.  The first and second greatest commandments are to love God and our neighbors, respectively.  Jesus was convinced that this orientation leads to an abundance of life and a transformed world:

This is my commandment: Love each other in the same way I have loved you. There is no greater love than to lay down one’s life for one’s friends. – John 15:12-13 | NLT 

I agree.  Yet I am fairly aware that I easily love some people while struggling to love others.  I am quite certain that in our beloved United States, love has been afforded to some more than others, which can be traced through our history, our laws, religious debates, and the varied experiences of citizens who call the US home.  We might think we are loving, but perhaps we are not loving in the same way that Jesus loves us.  Why do we see this so differently?  What has happened?  How does our faith mirror our reality, and how does it call us forward?  This series, for me, is an outworking of some very pertinent issues in our world related to what it means to be a Jesus follower in a very divided world.  Interestingly, though his call to love was very challenging, the disciples rose to the occasion, evidenced by this much later instruction from the Apostle John to the churches:

Dear friends, let us continue to love one another, for love comes from God.  Anyone who loves is a child of God and knows God. But anyone who does not love does not know God, for God is love. – 1 John 4:7-8 | NLT

 I grew up in a healthy home and household.  Human, for sure, but healthy. My parents are still married – on June 14, 2021, they will celebrate 64 years.  My dad’s job was as a pastor (or pastor-related), which meant our family was very involved in our faith.  Church every Sunday, some sort of weekly youth group gathering, and often a church camp in the summer. My parents were solidly mainline in their theology, reflecting the core of American Baptist beliefs, which meant that we were on the progressive side of things, even if quietly.  There was never much talk of heaven or hell as the primary motive for faith.  Faith was taught more as a way of life, a culture.

            My parents were also model “nice people”.  My dad’s professional reputation is that everyone he met felt valued by him.  The same could be said of my mom.  We were taught by example to respect other people, regardless of who they were or what they drank or smoked (in our house, drinking alcohol and smoking anything were vices eleven and twelve, respectively, of the Ten Commandments). My folks modeled generosity, too, both directly with people in need as well as toward the church and the extended efforts of the church nationally and internationally.  I’m trying to paint a picture of a balanced home life where I was taught by example how to be a good, compassionate person along the lines of Jesus.  The older I get, the more grateful I am for the foundation they provided.

            As good as it was, however, I found myself in some uncomfortable situations that I couldn’t quite make sense of, mostly with people who were American but did not look much like me, especially along racial or ethnic lines.  Not so much with people of Asian descent, however, but more so with Latinx and African Americans (only recently did I learn why).  I remind you that my parents treated all people really well – including Latinx and black people (as few as they numbered in our suburban world). My folks never used overtly derogatory language about any person different than us in terms of ethnicity or race, ever.  In retrospect, I realize that we simply never talked about it.  Maybe my siblings did?  I was the last of four, after all – my parents kind of dialed it in with me...

What was the discomfort about? I am pretty sure the discomfort I felt had much to do with a heightened awareness of the “otherness” of (especially) African Americans – there weren’t many Latinx people where I grew up back then, in Kansas and Michigan.  I remember being really self-conscious, not wanting to say something stupid, being really careful to be polite, trying to make a good impression, and feeling really anxious the whole time.  My personality drives me to want to make a good impression - in this environment, it was exponentially turbo-charged.  The few black people who sparsely inhabited by extremely Caucasian world might as well have been from Mars, they appeared so foreign to me. I also was aware that black people got a raw deal in the United States beginning with slavery.  I wasn’t sure how to feel or act in light of it, it just created an awkwardness in me.

All the while I knew the ethic of Jesus which directed its adherents to love our neighbors, even if – or especially if – they didn’t look like us.  Somehow, this kid (me), raised in a loving home where seeing others as equally valued and loved by God, still manifested a significant degree of awkwardness and clumsiness when it came to interacting with and processing my feelings related to people of other ethnicities or race.  It was almost as if something were in the air.  How much worse for those who were raised in homes that were not so genteel?

The early church recorded a remembrance of Jesus that served to answer some things about Jesus’ development.  Did you know that Jesus developed his identity and thought?  I think sometimes we think of Jesus like a Jack-in-a-Box – at just the right time, God turned the crank and out popped Jesus-in-a-Box!  If we really, really believe he was fully human, we need to let him have a fully human experience, which, if any depth of maturity is involved, includes coming to grips with how we’ve been shaped by our context and deciding who we want to become.  In the following story, I think we get a glimpse of the prejudice Jewish people held toward non-Jewish people.  I believe Jesus had to work through this in his development.

 Then Jesus left Galilee and went north to the region of Tyre and Sidon. A Gentile woman who lived there came to him, pleading, “Have mercy on me, O Lord, Son of David! For my daughter is possessed by a demon that torments her severely.”

But Jesus gave her no reply, not even a word. Then his disciples urged him to send her away. “Tell her to go away,” they said. “She is bothering us with all her begging.”

Then Jesus said to the woman, “I was sent only to help God’s lost sheep—the people of Israel.”

But she came and worshiped him, pleading again, “Lord, help me!”

Jesus responded, “It isn’t right to take food from the children and throw it to the dogs.”

She replied, “That’s true, Lord, but even dogs are allowed to eat the scraps that fall beneath their masters’ table.”

“Dear woman,” Jesus said to her, “your faith is great. Your request is granted.” And her daughter was instantly healed. (Matthew 15:21-28 | NLT)

            I think we see an undeveloped Jesus in this story where the forces that shaped him were in full view.  Commentaries that want to preserve an idea of Jesus being “perfect” in a very specific way will excuse Jesus’ rude exchange, even suggesting that he made the comment with a twinkle in his eye and a wink.  Just kidding around like we do.  Scholars who think differently about the full humanity of Jesus see it quite differently, akin to a white person today essentially using the “N-word” toward a black person: “Why would I waste anything good on a “N...” like you?  The picture changes a bit, doesn’t it?

            I will teach more about the culturally held views of non-Jews held by Jewish people more next week.  Suffice it to say that Jews in Jesus’ day and age did not view the “others” around them with favor.  They were under Roman occupation and they hated it, and clearly hated those who enforced it.  Ugly yet understandable.  Jesus was raised in a backwater community in the shadow of thriving Roman-influenced and Empire-money-infused shiny cities like Tyre and Sidon, which were in contrast to the relatively shabby city of Nazareth.  Jesus’ contemporaries were not particularly educated, and really didn’t care a lot about what was happening in the bigger cities funded by their tax dollars.  I maintain that Jesus’ insult to the woman who asked for help was a reaction based on everything that had formed Jesus up to that point, both the obvious and the subtle shaping forces that human beings experience by their families of origin, their culture, their moment in history – all of it has its affect.

            This may startle some folks who want Jesus to be squeaky clean to the point of being dismayed and disheartened.  Why bother with Jesus if he was THAT human?

            I find that this interpretation actually makes following Jesus more compelling, not less.  Jesus somehow overcame those culturally infused biases and was transformed before our very eyes to see the woman not by her label but as a human being worthy of compassion.  I need to learn from that!  What happened to foster such a shift?

            One of the things that helped my discomfort with people of color was exposure to people of color.  The more I was in the same space with these colorful friends, the more I realized we were much more alike than not.  We might structure our language differently and see the world differently, but at the end of the day we share a deep longing for the same dreams to come true.  We long for love, wellbeing, harmony, a good life for ourselves and those we love.  The deeper we dig into that great dream, the more we realize that we want it for everybody.

            I was afforded little opportunity to rub elbows with people of color growing up.  My high school in Michigan was in Okemos, an affluent suburb of Lansing, Michigan.  Until my senior year, there were only a couple of African Americans in my school.  College was a little better, where I became good friends with Adolphus Lacey who, like me, was headed toward pastoral ministry.  My Masters degree threw me into the deep end, reflecting the full diversity of the Chicago area.  Older, wiser men and women of color provided friendship and conversation that was so helpful in overcoming my fears of “the other”.  I wonder if that exchange with the desperate mother was one (of many) with non-Jewish people that exposed Jesus not just to the shared humanity with all other people, but also exposed his own jaded vision born from all the forces that shaped him.  He saw himself from a different plane, as an observer viewing himself, and could then decide whether or not he wanted to keep his jaded lens or get corrective lenses afforded by the Spirit of God.

            Oh, if we could do the same...  Jesus invites us to follow, which implies that we can should we accept.

 

Stuff to think about...

1.     What was your upbringing like on this?

2.     How did your family of origin communicate (or not) about other ethnicities or races?

3.     How colorful was your view of the world?

4.     How much interaction did you have with people of other ethnicities or races?  What was your experience like?  Any obvious discomfort or attitude or held values regarding these folks?

5.     Did any of your personal influencers use a different tone, or makes jokes more at the expense of some than others?

6.     When listening to someone else describing an encounter experienced or witnessed, was a person’s race ever mentioned even if it had no relevance to the story (e.g., were people’s color or ethnicity noted unless they were white)?

7.     How does the idea that Jesus needed to mature along these same lines mess with you?

8.     What are the concerns you have as we move forward in this series that might hinder you from more deeply engaging this subject?

Embracing Forgiveness 5: Why Forgive?

Note: You can watch this teaching on CrossWalk’s YouTube channel.

Barbara Cawthrone Crafton concludes her teaching and group interaction on the subject of forgiveness.

Process Stuff (from Embracing Forgiveness, Morehouse):

 

A friend told Barbara that if someone offends him, then that other person is essentially dead to him. This assertion leads Barbara into a compelling theological reflection which responds powerfully to the question, “Why forgive?” Here are 10 quotes from Barbara’s case for forgiveness:

 

1.     If someone has to be dead to me, then the world I hold is maimed, it’s damaged, it’s not complete, and it’s not true, because the person is not dead and does have lines in my play. I can’t take a pencil and draw a line through that person’s role in my life.

2.     The power of God, the energy of God, is the energy of existence, not non-existence.

3.     God is about being, not non-being. God is not a God who wants us to be less than we are. God is a God who has created us to be everything that we can be.

4.     When we refuse to forgive, we shrink our world. It is against God’s reality for us to shrink the world, because God’s energy has created an expanding universe, not a shrinking one.
God has set into motion this energetic creation so that we would be seeking our union with God. God attracts and we respond.

5.     There is a potent attractiveness between us and among us that is part of the attraction God has for us and the response we have toward God.

6.     To stand back from forgiveness is to feel that you can somehow decide not to be attracted to God.

7.     If my anger at you continues to sit in here (heart), I will be less able to respond authentically to the God who longs for me to respond.

8.     Wouldn’t it be better to have the energy of anger and non-forgiveness to use in some way other than keeping each other at arm’s length?

9.     The energy of God, the love of God flows unimpeded—a strong and powerful river. Wouldn’t it be better to let that river flow without any of the dams that could interrupt the flow of it?

 

Test the validity of these 10 statements for you by considering these kinds of questions:

1.     When have you felt “penciled out” of someone’s world? What was that like?

2.     What happened on occasions when you were trying to shrink your world while God was working to expand it?

3.     What’s that like when you just allow yourself to be drawn by the magnetic energy of God and let that be the force at work in your relationships?

4.     When have you noticed the difference between living fully into the spaciousness of God’s creation as opposed to expending energy on anger and non-forgiveness?

Embracing Forgiveness 4: How to Start

Note: You can watch this teaching on CrossWalk’s YouTube channel.

Barbara Cawthrone Crafton continues her teaching and group interaction on the subject of forgiveness.

Process Stuff (from Embracing Forgiveness, Morehouse):

A powerful thread running through Barbara’s teaching in this session emerges from the story of Joe and Erwin, the two evening prayer officiants in one of Barbara’s parishes. You have heard the story of how Joe became a spiritual allergen for Erwin. And you have heard how Barbara provided Erwin with a kind of ‘homeopathic cure’ for this spiritual allergy in the form of a tiny prayer: Just say his name, “Joe.”

 

Barbara offers a thoughtful progression of insight as she opens for us this concrete way of getting started on our forgiveness projects:

 

Putting a tiny bit of the offensive substance into the system repeatedly, bit by bit, over times helps the swelling to go down. The swelling has to go down in order to get healed from the allergy itself.

 

Using this prayer of the name means you can let God do the work. Don’t you do the work.

 

Over time you will change. This prayer will change you for sure. It will also change the one whose name it is.

 

Prayer is energy. It’s the gift of God’s energy. Love is energy. We are made of God’s energy and love.

 

In saying the name, “Joe,” you begin to create an opening through which this energy can flow.

 

Over time you change. Something good will happen to the person you are praying for; the energy of God does not create evil.

 

In these intractable situations where forgiveness seems impossible, step back and let God do some work. The sufficiency of God is bigger than ours.

 

It involves not trying to run everything ourselves, not thinking that forgiveness is a job we need to do. All we have to do—like all the spiritual practices—is to ask for it.

 

You say the name and you allow God to do the healing. You are patient with it.

 

You expect a miracle but you don’t know what it is because prayer isn’t shaping; we don’t order stuff and send it back if it’s not what we want.

 

It is just coming into the presence of God and allowing ourselves to be open channels for the love of God.

 

What are your “Joe” stories where you might have responded to a “spiritual allergy” through something as simple as saying the name of the other as part of your regular prayer practice?

 

Barbara clearly has a way of “seeing” prayer: prayer is energy; prayer can flow through an opening which you create with just one word; prayer allows the strength and power of the universe to move through us if we allow it; and we can get into this river of life and love and go with it.

 

Where does Barbara’s teaching on prayer practice intersect with your experience of Prayer?

 

What new possibilities of prayer are opened in you as you listen to Barbara?

Embracing Forgiveness 3: Chipping Away

Note: You can watch this teaching on CrossWalk’s YouTube channel.

You have now experienced Barbara’s gifts as storyteller as you listened to the story of Mrs. Lee and Mrs. Day. Having enjoyed the story, we will harvest the learnings from it. Here are five quotes from Barbara that will guide us in appreciating her reasons for telling this particular story:

·       The thing we are focused on when we have been injured gives the perpetrator more power than he or she really has. When we turn and face the situation more accurately, he or she shrinks to a normal human size.

·       If the perpetrator does the deed and you hold on to the deed, you’ve helped the perpetrator continue the deed; you’ve become a coconspirator with your own aggressor, not in a matter of guilt—the guilt is still theirs—but in the effect. There is a perverse identity between perpetrator and victim.

·       We can define ourselves as “the ones against so-and-so”; as the ones that must disagree with our enemy. Politics is often like that: “Well, I’m against whatever he’s for.” It becomes a substitute for thinking. We need to define ourselves as ourselves and not allow our enemy to define us.

·       Forgiveness is not this “wonderful thing” I’m going to do to welcome the perpetrator back into my world. Forgiveness is almost an act of self-love. It is a gift to myself. It is primarily for me that I need to forgive. Do you want freedom enough to turn your focus from the one who has hurt you to you, yourself, so that you alone can take the action you need to get out of jail—a jail the perpetrator may have built for you, but a jail whose door you continue to keep locked?

What insights will you take from the story of Mrs. Lee and Mrs. Day and from Barbara’s reflection about those two people and the choices they made?

When have you found yourself in the kind of relational jail that Barbara describes in the story and in her reflection? If you are still in one of those situations where you have given the perpetrator more power than is good for either of you, what options do you have to move on?

What options did the congregation of Mrs. Lee and Mrs. Day have other than building their own congregational life around the stubborn willfulness of these two “grand dames” of the congregation

Embracing Forgiveness 2: You Have heard It Said

Note: You can watch this teaching on CrossWalk’s YouTube channel.

Barbara Cawthrone Crafton continues her teaching and group interaction on the subject of forgiveness.

Process this (from the Embracing Forgiveness workbook, Morehouse):

One of the reasons that we have a hard time with forgiveness is that we hold incorrect ideas about what it is. Perhaps we are trying to do things in forgiveness that are not life-giving, edifying and useful.

 

Here is a review of six things that Barbara refutes as characteristics of forgiveness. For each one, there is a quote or two from Barbara to remind you of the fullness of her teaching on that matter.

 

You have heard it said that to forgive is to forget, but I say to you forgiveness is not forgetting.

People don’t forget important chapters in their lives. Forgiveness does not erase history. Your history has happened and it deserves to be honoured. If it’s not honoured it’s liable to be repeated.

      

You have heard it said that to forgive is to acquit, but I say to you forgiveness is not acquittal or exoneration.

We still have to pay the price for what we do. If someone is acquitted it means they didn’t do anything. We only forgive those who are guilty of something.

 

You have heard it said that to forgive is to pardon, but I say to you forgiveness is not pardon.

Even when forgiven, you may still have to pay for what you did. When you are pardoned, you don’t have consequences.

      

You have heard it said that forgiveness is a matter of degree, but I say to you forgiveness is not a matter of degree.

We have confused our feeling of horror at the crime with the capacity or lack of capacity to forgive. Even one death is too much. It’s difficult for us because of the horror we feel for large and heinous crimes. We cannot say that the power of God is not greater than these things. It might take us a while to wrap our minds around this one; and longer to wrap our hearts around it. “Okay” has nothing to do with anything when we’re talking about forgiveness.

      

You have heard it said that forgiveness is led by feeling, but I say to you forgiveness is not feeling.

If forgiveness is a feeling and if somehow, in order to forgive, I have to develop warm fuzzy feelings about someone who did something horrible to me; or, with regard to my own shame, if somehow I have to develop feelings of being welcomed and loved before I can be forgiven—feelings can’t lead me to that state.

      

You have heard it said that forgiveness is all about the past, but I say to you forgiveness is not about the past.

Forgiveness is about the present and the future. Who do I want my future to belong: the guy who hurt me in 1998 or me and God? I want to live my life with God. I don’t want to give it to anybody else. I want my present to be mine. I want my future to be mine.

As you listened to Barbara teaching about what forgiveness is not, where did you find her teaching intersecting with your lived experience? Which of these six “nots” has the most energy for you as you consider this matter of forgiveness?

Share stories and insights in twos, threes or small group, as time allows

 

 

In the midst of talking about what forgiveness is not, Barbara offers a helpful reflection on forgiveness as a process:

There’s a trinity of the human being: we are reason—we are feeling—we are will. We are not any one of these three things exclusively. All three are present in us, or we are not human. No one of these three can lead all the time. They each have functions. We have to balance them.

 

In the project of forgiveness, feelings aren’t going to lead you there. You might be too mad or too hurt. But feelings can follow. What will lead you to forgiveness is your will. I can’t make myself not hurt, but I can make myself take a step forward. If I can say, “I don’t forgive him. I don’t even want to forgive him, but I want to want to forgive; I want to be different,” then we’ve taken the first step. We haven’t taken the last; forgiveness is a process, not a moment.

 

If you can say, “Yes, I’ve begun the process of forgiving. I haven’t finished. It might take a whole life time to finish it, but I have begun here, so I can answer yes.” My will has begun to lead me in a direction that my feelings never could. If I can take a small step, God will bless that step and will increase it. It is a theological decision.

 

Tell the story of a time when you experienced forgiveness as process, not as a moment.

Embracing Forgiveness 1: Seventy Times Seven - Really?

Process Questions (from Embracing Forgiveness, Morehouse Education Resources):

Barbara states:

“Everybody has something about forgiveness. There’s somebody [who] did something terrible you can’t get past, or maybe you did something you can’t forgive yourself for, or [there’s] someone else [who] can’t forgive you.”

What is the first thing that comes to mind for you in this matter of forgiveness? What personal involvement in forgiving is still unfinished for you?

Barbara explains:

“This idea of ‘forgiving as we have been forgiven’ —maybe what it’s saying is if you forgive, you will know what it is to be forgiven, and if you don’t forgive, you won’t be able to accept this gift. “It’s not that I (God) am not giving it to you—I (God) am giving it to you all the time—it’s that you won’t be able to accept it.”

When have you experienced the power of forgiveness in the way that Barbara is describing? When have you received the gift of this reciprocal relationship between forgiving and being forgiven?

Barbara suggests:

“What makes forgiveness so impossible for us is the way anger functions in us over

time. It latches on. It lands in the heart and makes like a tumor there. Over time it makes its own blood supply and pretty soon it can’t be removed. It’s gotten too deep; it’s become a part of you and you feel as if you’d die. There are tumors like that; there are inoperable tumors you can’t excise because you’d kill the patient. Anger, the holding of a grudge, the lack of forgiveness is a tumor—a growth in the spiritual body.”

When have you experienced the persistent presence of anger as a kind of tumor that makes it increasingly difficult to move to forgiveness?

Barbara tells us:

“The lack of forgiveness that we experience is really an opportunity for us to come closer to God in asking for help. It makes us better than we were. That’s paradoxical.  ‘You mean this thing that I had, this sin of mine that I couldn’t forgive or wouldn’t forgive or that I could not get free from—my own shame—that thing is a means of grace?’ Why, yes.”

When have you experienced the grace of God as a gift of one of these situations that seemed to be completely lacking in grace?

Barbara assures us:

 “I can’t do much about what happened in the past, but I have a lot to say about who I’m going to be now and who I’m going to walk with. It’s hard for us to choose life sometimes, but we can still make that choice and we have help. We don’t have to do it all alone.”

 What’s one choice you are sitting with right now that could make a difference about how you move forward with life and with the possibility of grace? How will you remember that you are not alone?

O Come Emmanuel: Say Yes

Note: You can watch this teaching on CrossWalk’s YouTube channel.

2020 has left much to be desired. We have reason to hope for a better 2021 simply because it is hard to imagine anything worse than the previous year! We all have dreams for what could be. God has bigger dreams than we do, and they are actually the source of our deepest, truest, best dreams. The Christmas Story gives us guidance to how to realize those God-sourced dreams.

Christmas Eve: Weird

Note: You can watch this teaching on CrossWalk’s YouTube channel.

As we take some time again this year to reflect on the birth of Jesus, consider the context.  Israel had been under the thumb of foreign oppressors for centuries (save for a blip or two when they revolted, only to be squashed again).  Around the turn of the first century BCE, the Roman Empire was fully in place and in charge.  They were brutal in many respects, and the Jewish people longed for someone to lead them out of oppression into new freedom.  Would God send a messiah, and anointed one, to bring about such dramatic change that would surely include a military conquest?  Many surfaced, claiming to be the messiah, and were usually wiped out soon enough.  In addition, the leadership of the Jewish faith was corrupted by the power and influence they were awarded by Rome to keep the peace.  Reform was needed. That’s the basic historical context into which Jesus was born.

 

What about your context?  There is a continuum that represents how we approach the birth narrative of Jesus.  On one end are those who engage the story as literal, historical fact.  On the other end are those that see it as fiction created to provide a clearly God-ordained beginning story for the person who would become such a powerful conduit of God’s Spirit – a truly anointed Messiah, even if not what people expected.  Wherever you are on that spectrum, choose to wonder what truth is here for you today in the story, regardless of factuality.  That’s where the greatest power comes from anyway.  Use the song Silent Night by Pentatonix to warm you up to the story we will revisit.

 

Mary’s part of the story (Luke’s Gospel). In the sixth month of Elizabeth’s pregnancy, God sent the angel Gabriel to Nazareth, a village in Galilee, to a virgin named Mary. She was engaged to be married to a man named Joseph, a descendant of King David. Gabriel appeared to her and said, “Greetings, favored woman! The Lord is with you!”

Confused and disturbed, Mary tried to think what the angel could mean. “Don’t be afraid, Mary,” the angel told her, “for you have found favor with God! You will conceive and give birth to a son, and you will name him Jesus. He will be very great and will be called the Son of the Most High. The Lord God will give him the throne of his ancestor David. And he will reign over Israel forever; his Kingdom will never end!”

Mary asked the angel, “But how can this happen? I am a virgin.”

The angel replied, “The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you. So, the baby to be born will be holy, and he will be called the Son of God. What’s more, your relative Elizabeth has become pregnant in her old age! People used to say she was barren, but she has conceived a son and is now in her sixth month. For the word of God will never fail.”

Mary responded, “I am the Lord’s servant. May everything you have said about me come true.” And then the angel left her.

 

What a weird story.  Wouldn’t you agree? I wonder if what God was doing impacted Mary’s health: how she felt physically and emotionally.  I wonder if she became more conscientious about what her lifestyle once she realized she wasn’t just looking out for her own health, but someone else’s.

 

We’re living in a weird story, too.  We are being asked – all of humanity – to be conscientious about our physical and emotional health.  And not just for ourselves, but for someone else.  The physical limitations aren’t anywhere near being pregnant, but the emotional weight of what we are all experiencing is pronounced.  We are not invited to give birth to a baby, but we are invited to welcome Christ into our lives anew, to make room for more of God, more life and light, more shalom – a deep peace that comes from harmony within, with each other, and with all of creation.  Mary was under tremendous stress, yet God was fully with her.  We are under incredible stress, yet God is with us, too, ready to be realized in new ways every day.  The song Be Born In Me, performed by Francesca Battistelli invites us to reflect on the dynamics Mary endured and perhaps what we endure, too.

 

Joseph’s Story (Matthew’s Gospel).  This is how Jesus the Messiah was born. His mother, Mary, was engaged to be married to Joseph. But before the marriage took place, while she was still a virgin, she became pregnant through the power of the Holy Spirit. Joseph, to whom she was engaged, was a righteous man and did not want to disgrace her publicly, so he decided to break the engagement quietly.

As he considered this, an angel of the Lord appeared to him in a dream. “Joseph, son of David,” the angel said, “do not be afraid to take Mary as your wife. For the child within her was conceived by the Holy Spirit. And she will have a son, and you are to name him Jesus, for he will save his people from their sins.”

All of this occurred to fulfill the Lord’s message through his prophet:

“Look! The virgin will conceive a child!

She will give birth to a son,

and they will call him Immanuel,

which means ‘God is with us.’”

When Joseph woke up, he did as the angel of the Lord commanded and took Mary as his wife. But he did not have sexual relations with her until her son was born.

 

What a weird story.  Wouldn’t you agree? I wonder how Joseph’s life was impacted by this turn of events in any way, shape or form?  I wonder if his pride was hurt in any way?  I wonder if he ever felt like this was an unwelcome intruder into his life’s unfolding narrative?  I wonder if he ever felt like being voluntold was unjust – why should he have to change his life, his plans?  How unfair?

 

We are living in a weird story, too, where we may feel that our rights and freedoms are infringed upon by others.  It may even feel unjust at times what we are called to do.  We may assess the price we are having to pay to weather the multiple storms of 2020 as unfair.  If we’re honest, we might admit that our pride has a way of eclipsing our compassion.  Why should I be forced to wear a mask?  Why should my business be shut down?  Why should the business I want to support be shut down?  Why shouldn’t I be able to gather with whoever I want?  In a country that is built on radical individualism, a pandemic that calls us to radically consider the “other” is a tough medicine to take.  Joseph must have felt like he got ripped off, and likely struggled from time to time with the cost he was called to bear.  Yet God was present with him, helping him bring Jesus into the world and Christ’s presence into history in a new way.  Reflect on Joseph’s perspective with this song, The Carol of Joseph, by For King and Country.

 

The Birth (Luke).  At that time the Roman emperor, Augustus, decreed that a census should be taken throughout the Roman Empire. (This was the first census taken when Quirinius was governor of Syria.) All returned to their own ancestral towns to register for this census. And because Joseph was a descendant of King David, he had to go to Bethlehem in Judea, David’s ancient home. He traveled there from the village of Nazareth in Galilee. He took with him Mary, to whom he was engaged, who was now expecting a child.

And while they were there, the time came for her baby to be born. She gave birth to her firstborn son. She wrapped him snugly in strips of cloth and laid him in a manger, because there was no lodging available for them. And Joseph named him Jesus.

That night there were shepherds staying in the fields nearby, guarding their flocks of sheep. Suddenly, an angel of the Lord appeared among them, and the radiance of the Lord’s glory surrounded them. They were terrified, but the angel reassured them. “Don’t be afraid!” he said. “I bring you good news that will bring great joy to all people. The Savior—yes, the Messiah, the Lord—has been born today in Bethlehem, the city of David! And you will recognize him by this sign: You will find a baby wrapped snugly in strips of cloth, lying in a manger.”

Suddenly, the angel was joined by a vast host of others—the armies of heaven—praising God and saying,

“Glory to God in highest heaven,

and peace on earth to those with whom God is pleased.”

 

When the angels had returned to heaven, the shepherds said to each other, “Let’s go to Bethlehem! Let’s see this thing that has happened, which the Lord has told us about.”

They hurried to the village and found Mary and Joseph. And there was the baby, lying in the manger. After seeing him, the shepherds told everyone what had happened and what the angel had said to them about this child. All who heard the shepherds’ story were astonished, but Mary kept all these things in her heart and thought about them often. The shepherds went back to their flocks, glorifying and praising God for all they had heard and seen. It was just as the angel had told them.

 

What a weird story.  Wouldn’t you agree? I wonder what fears these shepherds faced that night.  They were given a job to do that night – were they terrified?  Did they feel like the risk was too high?  Were they in danger?  What about their flocks?  Would their following the orders of the angel jeopardize the safety of their flock?  I wonder what went through their minds going to a cave-barn to see the heralded baby – why is this the setting for such a birth?  They would surely be aware of their poverty, along with Mary and Joseph.  They would be fully aware of the fact that they were poor, too poor to get a room.  Poor enough to realize that the crisis of a government decision does not affect everyone equally, but as is always the case, the vulnerable pay a much greater price than everyone else.  Yet God showed up even in the barn, even in the manger, proclaiming that Christ comes for all, all the time, in all places.

 

We’re living in a weird story where we’re seeing the gap widening between the vulnerable and less vulnerable.  Storms highlight where the roof leaks, and we have been reminded that our country, as great as it is and as proud as we are to be her citizens, has a leaky roof.  Some simply aren’t protected from the elements.  For them, it might be easy to believe that God has left the scene.  But the Christmas Story suggests otherwise – God is especially with the poor.

 

In contrast to the poor shepherds and the poor parents of Jesus we have a story about some rich dudes to add in as well... 

 

The Wise Men (Matthew’s Gospel). About that time some wise men from eastern lands arrived in Jerusalem, asking, “Where is the newborn king of the Jews? We saw his star as it rose, and we have come to worship him.”

King Herod was deeply disturbed when he heard this, as was everyone in Jerusalem. He called a meeting of the leading priests and teachers of religious law and asked, “Where is the Messiah supposed to be born?”

“In Bethlehem in Judea,” they said, “for this is what the prophet wrote:

‘And you, O Bethlehem in the land of Judah,

are not least among the ruling cities of Judah,

for a ruler will come from you

who will be the shepherd for my people Israel.’”

Then Herod called for a private meeting with the wise men, and he learned from them the time when the star first appeared. Then he told them, “Go to Bethlehem and search carefully for the child. And when you find him, come back and tell me so that I can go and worship him, too!”

After this interview the wise men went their way. And the star they had seen in the east guided them to Bethlehem. It went ahead of them and stopped over the place where the child was. When they saw the star, they were filled with joy! They entered the house and saw the child with his mother, Mary, and they bowed down and worshiped him. Then they opened their treasure chests and gave him gifts of gold, frankincense, and myrrh.

When it was time to leave, they returned to their own country by another route, for God had warned them in a dream not to return to Herod.

 

What a weird story!  Wouldn’t you agree? I wonder what the Wise Men thought about all of this – a bunch of rich, well-educated leaders who went to honor a king, at great expense to themselves, only to have it lost and wasted on a poor peasant couple.  Did they at any time feel incredulous?  Or too good for the cave/stable, or for Joseph and Mary?  How did their sense of privilege get in the way of their experience? I bet this experience was surreal for them.  I wonder if they thought their wealth was a sign of God’s favor and blessing like so many people do, and could not imagine what this scene meant?  

 

We’re living in a weird story, too, where we are being asked to see things differently about ourselves and everyone around us.  The Wise Men did their part in welcoming Jesus and bringing Christ into the world – they honored God’s anointing with humility and generosity.  They recognized that a gift had been given the world by God and they responded in kind.

The greatest character in this weird story is the one that is in every scene.  The very Spirit of God through various means is everywhere – in angelic visits, dreams, choirs, and stars.  The very Spirit of God is in our weird story, too.  Can you perceive it?  Can you appreciate that while we celebrate and honor the birth of Jesus, we are at the same time invited to allow Christ – the anointing – to be born again and again in our time?  Will you welcome the gift of love and life into your life, knowing that you are loved, valued, and held?

 

Our final song is All Is Well, performed by Voctave.  This may seem in contradiction with the reality of the weird Christmas Story and our weird story right now with all that 2020 has ushered in.  This is no saccharine gloss over of denial.  This is actually a bold proclamation that no matter what we face, alone or together, there is something – some One – who is greater than our suffering, who will carry us through and welcome us fully whenever we lean into it and will welcome us home when our suffering ends.  There really is a peace that passes understanding, and it is witnessed in that stable, in that manger, in the whole scene and in all the characters.  Christ is born.  Then. Now. Forever.

O Come, O Come Emmanuel: Wise Men

Note: You can watch this teaching on CrossWalk’s YouTube channel.

Jesus was born in Bethlehem in Judea, during the reign of King Herod. About that time some wise men from eastern lands arrived in Jerusalem, asking, “Where is the newborn king of the Jews? We saw his star as it rose, and we have come to worship him.”

King Herod was deeply disturbed when he heard this, as was everyone in Jerusalem. He called a meeting of the leading priests and teachers of religious law and asked, “Where is the Messiah supposed to be born?”

“In Bethlehem in Judea,” they said, “for this is what the prophet wrote:

‘And you, O Bethlehem in the land of Judah,

are not least among the ruling cities of Judah,

for a ruler will come from you

who will be the shepherd for my people Israel.’”

Then Herod called for a private meeting with the wise men, and he learned from them the time when the star first appeared. Then he told them, “Go to Bethlehem and search carefully for the child. And when you find him, come back and tell me so that I can go and worship him, too!”

After this interview the wise men went their way. And the star they had seen in the east guided them to Bethlehem. It went ahead of them and stopped over the place where the child was. When they saw the star, they were filled with joy! They entered the house and saw the child with his mother, Mary, and they bowed down and worshiped him. Then they opened their treasure chests and gave him gifts of gold, frankincense, and myrrh.

When it was time to leave, they returned to their own country by another route, for God had warned them in a dream not to return to Herod. - Matthew 2 (NLT)

This story is shocking. God was communicating through a star - this is not orthodox Jewish stuff. The Wise Men were probably not Jewish - which means God was inclusive to other peoples from the very beginning of Jesus’ life.

The story is also shocking because the Wise Men discovered that the measure of worth as the world sees it was completely irrelevant to what God was doing in the life of Jesus. This Prince of Peace was not born in a palace, not laid in a gilded cradle, but rather a damp, stinky cave where animals were kept, and placed in a manger, where animals put their filthy mouths. In order to even see the baby, the Wise Men wold have to get down from their Italian camels, take of their fancy hats, and nearly crawl into the cave. In other words, if they wanted to see Jesus, to experience “God with us”, they had to humble themselves. If we want to experience God, humility is required.

Apparently they stayed humble, because they were able to sense God directing them to not report back to Herod. They had no idea what saying yes to that nudge would mean - they just did it. Because they did, Jesus went on living instead of getting killed the next day by Herod. Stay humble if you want to keep experiencing God and be part of something that is bigger than you can imagine!

O Come, O Come Emmanuel: The Shepherds

Note: You can watch this teaching on CrossWalk’s YouTube channel.

At that time the Roman emperor, Augustus, decreed that a census should be taken throughout the Roman Empire. (This was the first census taken when Quirinius was governor of Syria.) All returned to their own ancestral towns to register for this census. And because Joseph was a descendant of King David, he had to go to Bethlehem in Judea, David’s ancient home. He traveled there from the village of Nazareth in Galilee. He took with him Mary, to whom he was engaged, who was now expecting a child.

And while they were there, the time came for her baby to be born. She gave birth to her firstborn son. She wrapped him snugly in strips of cloth and laid him in a manger, because there was no lodging available for them.

That night there were shepherds staying in the fields nearby, guarding their flocks of sheep. Suddenly, an angel of the Lord appeared among them, and the radiance of the Lord’s glory surrounded them. They were terrified, but the angel reassured them. “Don’t be afraid!” he said. “I bring you good news that will bring great joy to all people. The Savior—yes, the Messiah, the Lord—has been born today in Bethlehem, the city of David! And you will recognize him by this sign: You will find a baby wrapped snugly in strips of cloth, lying in a manger.”

Suddenly, the angel was joined by a vast host of others—the armies of heaven—praising God and saying,

“Glory to God in highest heaven,

and peace on earth to those with whom God is pleased.”

When the angels had returned to heaven, the shepherds said to each other, “Let’s go to Bethlehem! Let’s see this thing that has happened, which the Lord has told us about.”

They hurried to the village and found Mary and Joseph. And there was the baby, lying in the manger. After seeing him, the shepherds told everyone what had happened and what the angel had said to them about this child. All who heard the shepherds’ story were astonished, but Mary kept all these things in her heart and thought about them often. The shepherds went back to their flocks, glorifying and praising God for all they had heard and seen. It was just as the angel had told them. – Luke 2 (NLT)

The shepherds in the story were likely not treated with much cultural respect. They were working the late shift, which nobody wanted. The fact that they were treated to the first announcement of Jesus’ birth speaks volumes about how God views all people equally. What did they see in the manger? A baby that looked like God, but also reflected themselves. What did it communicate to these young men that “God with us” would be happen in a place where they dwelled?

They didn’t leave the scene happy simply because the baby was cute. Their lives were transformed know that they were cared for and valued by God.

2020 CrossWalk Review

Can any of you remember the first three months of 2020?  Neither can I.  I had to go back to our YouTube Channel to remember what I was talking about.  I did a series on Old Testament characters and our children’s ministry followed suit on their own level.  Hints of COVID-19 were trickling in increasingly since before the New Year, and by mid-March, we stopped hosting worship services on campus.  We’ve offered virtual services ever since, along with virtual noon and evening Wednesday Praxis groups, virtual Teeters’ dinner group, virtual Men’s Breakfast, and virtual FUEL Women’s Brunch.  As far as our adult programming goes, we haven’t missed a beat, still offering virtually much of what we did on site, with no drop in participation.  We’ve even gained some folks! 

            Pulling off virtual Sunday services takes significantly more time than “live”.  Early on, our musicians recorded a bunch of songs to use, giving us a sense of “home” for our services – that required a lot of time from them and our sound and video team.  Thank you!  In order to have Sunday services recorded and produced has meant that I have to have everything done earlier in the week, record it, edit it, and upload it – which eats up the better part of a day or me each week.  Once uploaded to our YouTube Channel, Ted Valencia would then download it and burn DVD’s of the service for our members who don’t have internet access. Then he and Dar deliver them to their homes.  Thank you! I share this simply to make note of the fact that providing what we would normally do on site requires much more work than meets the eye – most churches are in the same boat. 

            Because of CrossWalk’s role as the primary evacuation shelter for Napa County, we have been deeply involved with Community Organizations Active in Disaster (COAD) for years.  Whenever a crisis hits Napa, the Office of Emergency Services activates COAD, because the County cannot meet all the needs on their own.  The COAD had to meet the unprecedented challenge, along with the County, to address food needs for about four times the regular number of people due to COVID’s impact on jobs.  Mental and Spiritual needs were pronounced as the crisis hit and continued, including needed messaging on dealing with stress.  Children!  What do you do with children during a global pandemic?  What about animals and their needs when money is tight?  What emergency financial assistance is needed and how can it get safely get where it needs to go?  What about volunteers?  How do you safely deploy volunteers during COVID?  And how do you communicate effectively with a multi-lingual community?  Along with Executive Directors of roughly two dozen non-profits in Napa County, Dar and I were honored to help provide voluntary leadership throughout this activation.  Dar is the Co-Chair of the Food Access Subcommittee, and I am the Co-Chair of the Faith Leaders Subcommittee as well as the Mental Health Leaders Subcommittee.  In addition, I am on the Executive Committee for the COAD, serving as Treasurer.  All told, for the first three months of COVID, Dar and I each logged over two days of work each week just to meet the need, all on top of our normal CrossWalk responsibilities.  COAD shifted to a more sustainable pace in July, requiring roughly a day of work each week for me.  CrossWalk’s campus and staff have been honored to serve in many capacities throughout the COVID response – we can take pride in that!  So important!

            Mother Nature didn’t care about the fact that Napans were already overly stressed with COVID, and delivered back-to-back record-breaking fires, consuming hundreds of homes, including that of our beloved CrossWalker, Karen Kenny (we stand with you!).  CrossWalk was immediately opened for each fire to provide shelter and support in partnership with Napa County.  All of this was made more complicated by COVID, of course, because it’s not safe to house people indoors during a global pandemic!  The first fire did not require much in the way of sheltering.  The second fire, however, with significantly populated areas being evacuated, flooded our campus with hundreds of evacuees.  We did the best we could to offer safe, welcome space while people waited to be placed temporarily in hotel rooms until they could return home.  But that is not a fast process, and we housed dozens before people were able to move on.  Thank you to all who were able to help while the shelters were open!  Yea CrossWalkers!

            In April, our Food Pantry stopped distribution, as everybody was directed toward the Food Bank. Karie Nuccio and Linda Smetzer, however, have been working their tails off reorganizing after we expanded and tiled their space.  They still receive donations from a couple of local grocery stores and are able to help a very limited number of clients. They put in many hours every week.  They are awesome!

            Furaha was also impacted by COVID.  Kenya shut down the schools, forcing cramped living conditions in the slums.  We immediately provided several thousand dollars to help them get food out to their most vulnerable families, which was of great help.  In October we sent thousands more to help them buy some much needed COVID-related supplies which will help them reopen safely, and we hope to send them even more in December to help them with some renovations of both the primary and high schools.

            This year has brought much grief, especially those who have lost their loved ones.  We stand with the families of Bill Swanson, Dot Hoover, Roger Langley, Larry McCart, Kenn Vigoda, Max Proteau, and Lisa Haas’ dad, Lawrence Paul Scott, Sr.  Say an extra prayer for these families as they were not able to honor their loved ones as we usually do.  Some of us have lost employment and are anxiously waiting for this season to pass.  This has been a year of strained emotions, to say the least. Breathe, please, and don’t try to go it alone.

            COVID has meant that nearly all of the groups that meet at CrossWalk have had to meet online as well.  We took advantage of the campus being empty and have completely remodeled three of our conference rooms that are used most heavily by recovery groups.  In addition, we have repainted the main lobby and hallway, giving everything a fresh look.  We intend to remodel the front office soon and repaint the Education Wing hallway as well.  We ripped up the awful carpet in our Education Wing and have replaced it with beautiful tile.  Our Gym kitchen was completely gutted, and we are working hard to bring it up to commercial grade.  We are partnering with Feeding it Forward – a local non-profit organization that captures otherwise wasted food and repurposes it for those in need.  Now that fire season is over, we will also be addressing much needed work in our locker rooms and Gym lobby bathrooms so that when we offer shelter, it will be truly hospitable.  All of these renovations have been funded apart from our General Fund.  For years we have been building designated funds from rental income, grants and directed gifts allocated for such improvements.

            CrossWalk is still open, which requires funding.  In some ways this has been an understandably difficult year financially.  We usually receive a significant amount of income from groups who rent our facility – much of that is obviously gone.  Because of the jolt COVID has done to our economy, some folks have not been able to support CrossWalk to the level that had hoped.  By those two measures – rental income and regular support, it’s been a tough fiscal year.  However, we were able to secure the Payroll Protection Program loan/grant which helped us tremendously, and a few extra, over-the-top surprise contributions and awards have also come our way which have really helped us survive.  THANK YOU for your financial support!  We cannot make it without your generosity!

            As we journey through Advent toward Christmas Day, we especially want to support our young families who are sick and tired of looking at screens.  We are supplying them with Advent kits to help them experience a more faith-filled, creative, meaningful, and interactive season in the weeks to come.

            Our purpose as a church is to follow in Jesus’ footsteps, ushering in holistic wellbeing for all people and the planet through lifelong learning, kneeling in service, proclaiming grace while pursuing justice, cultivating deep spirituality, and inclusive loving community. All things considered, I think we did pretty well.  This has been a grueling year for Dar and I – one of the most challenging and taxing in each of our respective 20+ years serving CrossWalk – much more work under much greater stress.  Thank you for your love and prayers.  We are doing our best to serve the church and the community well, hoping to make God smile and CrossWalkers proud. We are honored to serve you all – please let us know what more we can do.

 

With shalom toward shalom,

 

Pete

Pete@CrossWalkNapa.org

O Come, O Come Emmanuel: Joseph

Now the birth of Jesus the Messiah took place in this way. When his mother Mary had been engaged to Joseph, but before they lived together, she was found to be with child from the Holy Spirit. Her husband Joseph, being a righteous man and unwilling to expose her to public disgrace, planned to dismiss her quietly. But just when he had resolved to do this, an angel of the Lord appeared to him in a dream and said, “Joseph, son of David, do not be afraid to take Mary as your wife, for the child conceived in her is from the Holy Spirit. She will bear a son, and you are to name him Jesus, for he will save his people from their sins.” All this took place to fulfill what had been spoken by the Lord through the prophet:

“Look, the virgin shall conceive and bear a son, and they shall name him Emmanuel,” which means, “God is with us.” 

When Joseph awoke from sleep, he did as the angel of the Lord commanded him; he took her as his wife but had no marital relations with her until she had borne a son; and he named him Jesus. – Matthew 1:18-25 (NRSV)

 

I don’t know about you, but my dreaming has been off the charts since COVID hit back in March.  Almost all of them nonsense.  Places that don’t make sense with people who don’t make sense being there, all with little or no redeeming value.  Sometimes I remember enough of them to share with my family.  I think they are getting concerned about me – at least that’s what last night’s dream indicated...

Dreams sometimes provide insight into our lives, at other times they serve simply as a release valve for our over-worked and over-stressed brains, and at times God speaks in dreams.  I’ve had a few over my lifetime that I couldn’t shake and that spoke to me.  In ancient times, people took such things extremely seriously.  So, while we may laugh off Joseph’s dream as the result of too many slices of pizza, the original hearers of the story would have understood it as a sign of God’s voice.  What’s harder for you to believe, that the angel Gabriel would show up to Mary in broad daylight, or that an angel would speak to Joseph in a dream?  What would have more influence on you?

            We know that Joseph was troubled as he drifted off to sleep.  Of course.  The news of Mary’s pregnancy was a serious infraction.  Some were likely calling for her to be stoned.  Joseph would have to throw the first one.  He may have wanted to kill her for what this was doing to his life, but he didn’t really want her dead.  His decision to cut his losses, to see it for what it was – a dead end – made sense.  Lights out.

            The dream’s message was offering an alternative narrative and possibility, however.  This was not the end but a beginning to a different story than he could have imagined.  It didn’t have to mean the end of hope. God was up to something – would Joseph like to get in on it?  “God with us” was the possibility – would Joseph play his part to help usher it in?

            Such a dilemma is not for the faint of heart.  It is a very human issue.  Extremely relevant.  We are all Joseph at one time or another.  We get a bad deal.  Life doesn’t treat us fairly.  People we thought we could trust don’t appear so.  People we care about hurt us.  The plans we had are laid waste.  A lot of us feel this right now thanks, in small or large measure, to COVID-19.  Some of us have lost loved ones to COVID-19.  Some have lost jobs.  Some have lost loved ones to other things but had to soldier on alone due to safety restrictions.  Some have lost their businesses.  Some have lost their homes.  It’s okay, by the way, to “fly the bird” at COVID-19 and bid it a fine F-You!  Good release.  Cathartic.  COVID is like the honey badger – it doesn’t care what you think.

            Like Joseph, we are faced with our own decisions as to how to respond to what we are all experiencing.  Joseph’s initial reaction was to divorce Mary.  That may appear kind and honorable, but it meant awful things for Mary and only sympathy for Joseph.  There is a kind of retribution in his decision which is completely understandable and rational.  It was a decision that served to protect his ego and sort of soothe his pain.

In his dream, however, he was told that God was still in the game and was wanting to even use this to bring more of God into the world.  It could still happen without Joseph.  Yet God was extending an invitation to him to join in.  All he had to do was choose the way of shalom over retribution, the way of God over ego.  Not easily done, and very disorienting.

There is another character named Joseph in the Bible’s first book of Genesis.  He is the 11th son of his very wealthy dad, Jacob, and the first-born son of his mom, Rachel.  He was created from true love, and he was dad’s favorite.  Everybody knew it, which lead to family problems.  Joseph was a dreamer and interpreter of dreams.  Sometimes the dreams were highly offensive to his brothers, who eventually reached the tipping point and got rid of Joseph by selling him into slavery in Egypt.  Not fair!  I think Joseph would be a bit angry, don’t you?  He made the best of slavery, but yet again was mistreated.  Not fair!  He was even imprisoned.  Not fair!  He made the best of it and thought he had worked out a deal with a guy who owed him a big favor that would lead to him getting released from prison.  The guy forgot for a long time.  Not fair!  Over a long period of time Joseph didn’t only grow older, he matured.  There is a world of difference between the two, isn’t there?  He let go of his anger and hatred that was eating him alive (no doubt), and instead chose the way of shalom, which also happens to lead to more shalom.  After an incredible series of events, the story gets a happy ending.  The family is reunited.  The future of Israel is secured.  God was with them the whole time.

To review, that story was about a Joseph whose dreams were used by God to invite him into what God was doing in the world, who ended up traveling all the way to Egypt, only to discover God was still with him.

In Jesus’ birth narrative, a different Joseph dreams of God inviting him to participate in what God is wanting to do – bring Emmanuel into the world, bring more “God with us” into our world.  If you’ve read ahead, you know that this Joseph also traveled to Egypt after Jesus was born (which means Jesus did, too).  Then the respective families eventually made their way back home.  It’s actually a recurring theme that runs the length of the Bible, which means there is a lesson to be learned here.  Life continually cycles through Order-Disorder-Reorder.  If you think about it for a while, you will see the pattern in your life.  When we’re in the middle of the disorder, we forget that this is simply part of life.  We freak out.  We react instead of responding.  We choose to divorce Mary quietly. But when we are still enough, I wonder if, like Joseph, we will be able to hear the voice of God inviting us to play our part in bringing Emmanuel into the world, more God with us than before.

Take heart, my friends!  And listen up!  Advent reminds us that God is with us and compels us to follow the lead of those in the story who heard the invitation to play their part, say yes.

O Come, O Come Emmanuel: Mary

Note: You can watch this teaching on CrossWalk’s YouTube channel.

In the sixth month of Elizabeth’s pregnancy, God sent the angel Gabriel to Nazareth, a village in Galilee, to a virgin named Mary. She was engaged to be married to a man named Joseph, a descendant of King David. Gabriel appeared to her and said, “Greetings, favored woman! The Lord is with you!”

Confused and disturbed, Mary tried to think what the angel could mean. “Don’t be afraid, Mary,” the angel told her, “for you have found favor with God! You will conceive and give birth to a son, and you will name him Jesus. He will be very great and will be called the Son of the Most High. The Lord God will give him the throne of his ancestor David. And he will reign over Israel forever; his Kingdom will never end!”

Mary asked the angel, “But how can this happen? I am a virgin.”

The angel replied, “The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you. So the baby to be born will be holy, and he will be called the Son of God. What’s more, your relative Elizabeth has become pregnant in her old age! People used to say she was barren, but she has conceived a son and is now in her sixth month. For the word of God will never fail.”

Mary responded, “I am the Lord’s servant. May everything you have said about me come true.” And then the angel left her. – Luke 1:26-38 (NLT)

 

Believe it or not, I have gotten tongue-tied a handful of times in my life.  Sometimes it happens when I am in the company of somebody I want to really impress.  Could be an author, or a leader of an organization I admire, or an artist, or a politician, or... who knows – could be just about anybody if the context was right.  I stand there in front of them, seemingly brainless, nothing to say, only dumb questions to ask, like, “So how’s the weather where you’re from” or “What’s your favorite burger joint?”  Important stuff to know from people I admire, these.  I’ve missed some opportunities to really pick some brains over the years, but instead learned about their favorite pizza.

Sometimes I am the person that causes other people to get tongue-tied. It’s my title.  The “Reverend” has an amazing way of freaking people out.  Sometimes it’s really funny, like when people tell some awful, classless joke or swear like a sailor or say that religious people are morons, then someone tells them I’m a pastor.  They immediately change and usually have to go wash their hair or something.  For some, I am seen as an authority figure, like a principal.  They know they are probably in trouble – they just haven’t figured out why yet and they know I must already know!  I wish they would calm down and just be themselves and let me be a human being. Let’s have a conversation.

Jesus’ birth narrative according to Luke begins with one of these understandably awkward interactions.  A young woman – maybe 12-13 years old – has this encounter with an angel of God that surely blew her mind.  Of course, she was confused.  Of course, she was disturbed. Of course, she wondered how she was going to get pregnant given her circumstances.  Of course, Gabriel gave a completely reasonable explanation of what was to come.  No need to ask any more questions – it’s all perfectly clear. I’m in.

There is a story in the Gospel of John where Jesus starts this conversation with a Samaritan woman.  He knew he was violating protocol in speaking to her – men didn’t have such conversations with women whom they deemed “less than”.  Add to that, Jesus was Jewish – Jews avoided all contact with Samaritans, whom they loathed.  None of this was lost on the woman.  She didn’t want to talk to him, either, for some of the same reasons.  But there they were.  Jesus asked her for some water (again, inappropriate in that context).  She argued.  Jesus replied, “If you only knew the gift God has for you and who you are speaking to, you would ask me, and I would give you living water” (John 4:10). She didn’t know to ask anything more than she could.

We should expect the same of Mary.  A girl that age, facing a pre-arranged marriage and everything about her body and life changing on the horizon, I imagine her prayer/wish list was pretty basic: I hope Joseph doesn’t hurt me; I hope we can afford to eat; I hope we have a roof over our head; I hope I can get pregnant; I hope I get pregnant with sons; I hope my children live into adulthood; I hope I survive giving birth; I hope I don’t get mistreated by Roman soldiers; I hope Joseph doesn’t get killed and leave me widowed and helpless.  For her, Christ’s coming was what Maslow would predict for her prayers: basic necessities, please! Beyond that, she likely had in mind some of the things being said around her: the end of Roman oppression and the restored reign of their Jewish nation.  We should not expect her to ask, for instance, how Jesus’ death on a cross was going to become associated with substitutionary atonement which would inform communion which would raise questions about yeast and bread which would, of course, be so important as to split the Church.  She never brought it up.  Because why would she when what was going to happen in her body was much more pressing?

She had no way of knowing the fullness of what Christ’s coming would mean for her, or her son, or the Jews, or the Gentiles, or Empire, or American politics.  She could not begin to imagine what her role would do to shatter a glass ceiling – at least in the hearts of women – forever.  She could not possibly understand how what was going to take place would bring so much good into the world, and also be misused to bring horrific suffering as well.  All she had to work with was right in front of her nose. She could only imagine what the immediate future would hold when her baby bump began to show.  She couldn’t imagine what Jesus’ life would involve, or watching her son get publicly tortured to death.

Her decision was based on what she knew right then, not the whole future. She was partly star-struck, but also bound by her lack of imagination.  We all are.  We can only see in part.  And yet we are all called forward by the spirit of God to allow Christ to come. The Spirit of God is always coming, always inviting us to participate in the coming of Christ.  That invitation to usher in the anointing of God is good news, yet at the same time confusing and disturbing, leaving us with questions about what is top of mind.  For Mary, it was (naturally) all about her pregnancy given that she was not yet married to her fiancée, Joseph.  What newness would you love to see take place in our world, your world?  Can you name one, or two, or fifty-two things?  What’s at the top of the list?  If Christ should come as you wish, what will that mean for you?  What will be asked of you?  What might feel confusing or disturbing?

I believe Emmanuel always wants to come.  I think Emmanuel – God with us – comes more frequently than we think, and that we are more likely to experience such a presence of God when we are aware of its possibility and are open to being a conscious, willing partner in it.

What does O Come, O Come, Emmanuel mean to you this year, all of you Marys?  Will you say yes to being pregnant with the Christ-child, nurturing yourself and the incarnation along to ensure a healthy gestation and delivery?

Go Be Jesus: Here we Go!

Note: You can watch this teaching on CrossWalk’s YouTube channel.

I sinned. One way of defining sin is “the culpable disturbance of shalom.”  I was deserving of blame – my part, anyway – of not honoring, seeking, cultivating, fostering, thinking, being, acting, feeling, extending, perpetuating, or spreading deep peace, wellbeing, wholeness, or restoration.  I sinned.

            My sin had to do with my attitude and behavior (as it always does).  My sinful behavior was related to my speech.  No, I wasn’t dropping F-bombs and using the Lord’s name in vain as often as possible.  My sin had to do with the carelessness and crassness of my language toward people that were no like me.  Not my race.  Not my gender. Not my cultural background. Not my sexual orientation.  Slang words were used to speak of others who fell into those categories.  Most who knew me back then, by the way, would not likely remember me as standing out for my slurs.  In fact, most would probably think I was generally polite.  Yet I remember the destructive words and phrases which disintegrated shalom and its potential. What does this mean?  It means I was normal, and normal was sinful, responsible for disturbing shalom. 

            Frederick William Faber, a hymn writer and theologian (he wrote the familiar hymn, Faith of our Fathers) offered this insight on kindness: “A single act of kindness throws out roots in all directions, and the roots spring up and make new trees. The greatest work that kindness does to others is that it makes them kind themselves.” This reminds me of the early Jewish story of the twin brothers Esau and Jacob.  They competed before they left the womb.  Their dad, Isaac, played favorites.  Their mom, Rebekah, did too.  There was a major grievance between the two that led to their relationship’s dissolution for decades.  When they both matured after many years of life’s crucible, they chose shalom.

            The Apostle Paul, who wrote two thirds of the New Testament “books” was no stranger to being offended or being an offender.  He had something to say while he sat under house arrest in Rome awaiting his eventual death.  His words are instruction and invitation: 

 

God wants us to grow up, to know the whole truth and tell it in love—like Christ in everything. We take our lead from Christ, who is the source of everything we do. He keeps us in step with each other. His very breath and blood flow through us, nourishing us so that we will grow up healthy in God, robust in love.

And so I insist—and God backs me up on this—that there be no going along with the crowd, the empty-headed, mindless crowd. They've refused for so long to deal with God that they've lost touch not only with God but with reality itself. They can't think straight anymore. Feeling no pain, they let themselves go in sexual obsession, addicted to every sort of perversion.

But that's no life for you. You learned Christ! My assumption is that you have paid careful attention to him, been well instructed in the truth precisely as we have it in Jesus. Since, then, we do not have the excuse of ignorance, everything—and I do mean everything—connected with that old way of life has to go. It's rotten through and through. Get rid of it! And then take on an entirely new way of life—a God-fashioned life, a life renewed from the inside and working itself into your conduct as God accurately reproduces his character in you.

What this adds up to, then, is this: no more lies, no more pretense. Tell your neighbor the truth. In Christ's body we're all connected to each other, after all. When you lie to others, you end up lying to yourself.

Go ahead and be angry. You do well to be angry—but don't use your anger as fuel for revenge. And don't stay angry. Don't go to bed angry. Don't give the Devil that kind of foothold in your life.

Did you used to make ends meet by stealing? Well, no more! Get an honest job so that you can help others who can't work.

Watch the way you talk. Let nothing foul or dirty come out of your mouth. Say only what helps, each word a gift.

Don't grieve God. Don't break his heart. His Holy Spirit, moving and breathing in you, is the most intimate part of your life, making you fit for himself. Don't take such a gift for granted.

Make a clean break with all cutting, backbiting, profane talk. Be gentle with one another, sensitive. Forgive one another as quickly and thoroughly as God in Christ forgave you.

Watch what God does, and then you do it, like children who learn proper behavior from their parents. Mostly what God does is love you. Keep company with him and learn a life of love. Observe how Christ loved us. His love was not cautious but extravagant. He didn't love in order to get something from us but to give everything of himself to us. Love like that. – Ephesians 4:15-5:2 (MSG)

 

He wrote a letter to another nearby community at the same time where he wrote similar words:

So if you're serious about living this new resurrection life with Christ, act like it. Pursue the things over which Christ presides. Don't shuffle along, eyes to the ground, absorbed with the things right in front of you. Look up, and be alert to what is going on around Christ—that's where the action is. See things from his perspective.

Your old life is dead. Your new life, which is your real life—even though invisible to spectators—is with Christ in God. He is your life. When Christ (your real life, remember) shows up again on this earth, you'll show up, too—the real you, the glorious you. Meanwhile, be content with obscurity, like Christ.

And that means killing off everything connected with that way of death: sexual promiscuity, impurity, lust, doing whatever you feel like whenever you feel like it, and grabbing whatever attracts your fancy. That's a life shaped by things and feelings instead of by God. It's because of this kind of thing that God is about to explode in anger. It wasn't long ago that you were doing all that stuff and not knowing any better. But you know better now, so make sure it's all gone for good: bad temper, irritability, meanness, profanity, dirty talk.

Don't lie to one another. You're done with that old life. It's like a filthy set of ill-fitting clothes you've stripped off and put in the fire. Now you're dressed in a new wardrobe. Every item of your new way of life is custom-made by the Creator, with his label on it. All the old fashions are now obsolete. Words like Jewish and non-Jewish, religious and irreligious, insider and outsider, uncivilized and uncouth, slave and free, mean nothing. From now on everyone is defined by Christ, everyone is included in Christ.

So, chosen by God for this new life of love, dress in the wardrobe God picked out for you: compassion, kindness, humility, quiet strength, discipline. Be even-tempered, content with second place, quick to forgive an offense. Forgive as quickly and completely as the Master forgave you. And regardless of what else you put on, wear love. It's your basic, all-purpose garment. Never be without it.

Let the peace of Christ keep you in tune with each other, in step with each other. None of this going off and doing your own thing. And cultivate thankfulness. Let the Word of Christ—the Message—have the run of the house. Give it plenty of room in your lives. Instruct and direct one another using good common sense. And sing, sing your hearts out to God! Let every detail in your lives—words, actions, whatever—be done in the name of the Master, Jesus, thanking God the Father every step of the way...

Be gracious in your speech. The goal is to bring out the best in others in a conversation, not put them down, not cut them out. – Colossians 3:1-17, 4:6 (MSG)

 

The above is worthy of our time.  Perhaps we can start our day with these for a week and see what a difference it makes in helping us not sin but bring more shalom into our lives and world.

            Nearly two years ago I was invited to be a part of an initiative from First Five Napa County, an organization that seeks to protect and improve the lives of our youngest community members, knowing the first five years of our lives predict a lot about how our remaining years might unfold.  We learned a lot about ourselves, our community, our capacity, and about how we might bring about more shalom for more people in Napa County.  The second cohort recently completed their training, and I was made aware from a couple of their members of a project that we can all be part of if we choose. The project is called “Napa Strong Enough”.  The gist is that we promote shalom for all people in Napa with a yard sign, and that we pledge to shape our lives and speech accordingly. As you can easily see, focus is given to those in our community who are often easily targeted as “others” with language and behavior that restricts them from experiencing the shalom we are called to foster. 

Simply putting a yard sign in front of our homes and businesses is a really important action, but so is pledging to live into its goal.

             I invite you to consider this invitation not simply from First 5 Napa Network, but from the heart of God.  This is who We are.  We choose this because we believe everyone is made in the image of God – there are no “others” – there is only “us”.  We choose to take this pledge because it is completely in line with being more rooted in shalom, promoting shalom, extending shalom for ourselves and the whole world.  We do this because it is, I believe, in line with “Thy Kingdom come, Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven.”  Will you post a sign?  Will you take the pledge? CrossWalk has a limited supply of them for $10 each.  You can make a donation online and swing by and pick one up or email us and we’ll deliver a sign to you.

            May you choose to recognize your sin and choose to stop.  May you recognize ways to do the opposite of getting in the way of the Kingdom of God.  May you choose to join God in creating a world where shalom becomes more and more the source of life and the standard with which we measure our attitude, behavior, and policy.  May it be so.

Go Be Jesus: Why?

Note: You can watch this teaching on CrossWalk’s YouTube channel.

This Go Be Jesus series was meant to give us a clearer picture of who Jesus was in order that we would have a better idea of what it means to be his followers and proclaimers, his disciples as well as his apostles.  Let’s review, shall we?

Every serious Jesus scholar is clear about Jesus’ purpose in his life: to proclaim what the Kingdom of God is like and usher it into the world as much as possible.  The Kingdom of God was and is different than the kingdoms of our world and the way humanity tends to think.  The Kingdom of God reflects its King.  Of course, we’re using metaphor here – we need to move beyond anthropomorphic visualizations of God.  The God Jesus referred to was and is full of grace, truth, mercy, and calls for justice for those who do not have it.  This God is one who seeks to restore everything to the very good it was made to be. The goal of this God is shalom.  The ethos of God is shalom – the ends and means are the same.  Jesus deep peace and harmony in his life and ministry – it is the Way that leads to the restoration, revitalization, and resurrection that we all long for.  Shalom was his mission, and it was not always “warm hugs and chocolate chip cookies”.  In his temptation camping trip, Jesus made it clear he was not going to be driven by the ways of the world, but by the shalom of God.

When Jesus invited people to become his disciples, it was not a casual offer.  Those who received the invitation knew that it was a great honor that implied confidence in the invited one on the part of the inviter.  If Jesus asks someone to follow in his footsteps, it meant that he believed the person could learn how to walk in the same way he did.  The word Christian literally means “little Christ.”  To be a Christian is to be like Jesus, to live like Jesus.  To learn to live in Jesus’ Way.  The Mandalorians may think they have coined the phrase, “this is the Way”, but the earliest Jesus followers owned the copyright.  The original community of Christians were first called, simply, the people of The Way. Have you said yes to the invitation from the Spirit of God to follow the Way of Jesus?  The Way that leads to shalom for you and all others?

Disciples are learners.  Jesus’ first disciples had a lot of learning to do which required a lot of unlearning as well.  They had been enculturated by their environment and a particular, unchecked rendition of Judaism that they simply took on faith as accurate.  Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount – his campaign speech which he undoubtedly reiterated many times – was filled with one mind-blower after another about the way God works in the world and how we are to bring change.  He begins by affirming the inherent value of all people, especially noting those who have been told otherwise.  Non-violent resistance is clearly taught.  New ethics are iterated that are in contrast to his cultural context.  It didn’t always sit well.  I have a hunch that it still doesn’t sit well.  Are you aware that the Jewish tradition understood that they were to mandate provisions for the poor among them?  That they were to live in a system where debt was canceled every seven years?  Where immigrants were to be treated with great hospitality and humanity?  Where greed was not tolerated, especially when it hurt the poor (as it always does)?  Did you know that the Jewish nation was not to place too much trust in their military strength?  I wonder how this really lands with many in the United States?  I’ve heard it said that when Jesus speaks about taking care of the poor, it is called Christianity, but when politicians speak of it, it is called socialism.  Hmmm.

Deep reflection on the meaning of shalom and how to live it out translated into a life that was incredibly meaningful and impactful for Jesus and all who have ever followed.  It resulted in a life of service to others.  It meant coming alongside people who have been treated harshly and unjustly, speaking and being grace to and for them.  It also meant using their voice to call out the absence of shalom in the system.  There were actors in the world who were blockades to shalom for others.  Calling them out took great courage because it often carried with it the high price of their retribution.  The Way led them regularly to solitude, stillness, and silence where they could focus more clearly on the voice of God away from the noise of the world around them.  The Way also took them to a deeper understanding of love well beyond the transactional rendering so prevalent in humanity.  Deep love allowed for the love of even one’s enemies – not in a pushover, doormat way, but an ability to espouse love and respect not based on the worthiness of the recipient but on the nature of God and who we are as those created in God’s image.

The result of living in the Way of Jesus is an abundant life.  Inherent in the Way is the calling to be not just a disciple but also an apostle – not simply students but also teachers.  When we live out our role as both disciples and apostles, we change for the better, and the world does, too.  For your own sake, say yes to the invitation of Jesus.  For the sake of the world, say yes to living in the Way of Christ.

Go Be Jesus: Community

Note: You can watch this teaching on CrossWalk’s YouTube channel.

What have been among your favorite TV shows over the years?

MASH was a favorite from my childhood, even if I didn’t fully understand all that was going on.  In the 1980’s, there was Cheers.  In the 90’s, Seinfeld and Friends were high on our list.  Most recently, Superstore and Brooklyn 99 have made us giggle, and Anne with an E choked us up.  Just this past week we finished watching the last of Schitt’s Creek, which is not only really fun for a pastor to say but was an incredibly well-written show.

Why do we get drawn to some shows?  Why do they stick? What is it about them that resonates with us?

One of the things that makes stuff stick with me is the characters and relationship between them.   Plot lines matter, of course, but in the end,  they are not primary.  Gilligan’s Island had ridiculous plot lines, yet it still got huge viewership.  Seinfeld is a show about nothing.  Schitt’s Creek’s stories were not really what we cared about – it was the interplay of characters that we loved.  The shows represent life, even if caricaturized. The cast becomes part of us somehow, a sense of community develops, so much so that when the show is over, we feel loss.

We do not thrive alone.  We might survive, but that is hardly the same thing.  Human interaction, relationship, community – these are necessary building blocks of being a healthy human being.  We sometimes know the power of supportive relationships when we are in them, and we are certainly aware of our lack when we don’t.

Jesus – the guy we look to as our model for what a shalom life is supposed to look like – never espoused isolation as a way of life.  Yes, he was remembered for taking time for solitude, but that was because the rest of the time he surrounded himself with his disciples, his extended followers, and the people her served. Recall that Jesus’ primary goal in his life and ministry was to increase the Kingdom of God on earth, which is experienced as shalom as a means and end.  Shalom was Jesus’ primary ethos when it came to community as well.

Loving your neighbor as yourself was second only to loving God (and intricately related to each other).  What does that look like?

First, we need to appreciate the make-up of the disciples. While they were all Jews, they were not all the same:

During that time, Jesus went out to the mountain to pray, and he prayed to God all night long. At daybreak, he called together his disciples. He chose twelve of them whom he called apostles: Simon, whom he named Peter; his brother Andrew; James; John; Philip; Bartholomew; Matthew; Thomas; James the son of Alphaeus; Simon, who was called a zealot; Judas the son of James; and Judas Iscariot, who became a traitor. (Luke 6:12-16 NRSV)

            We know from other stories that this group of men were fisherman and day-laborers like Jesus, that at times there were ego wars and power plays.  We also know that Simon was called a Zealot, which was a significant segment of Jews that wanted to aggressively overthrow the Roman occupation.  And then, of course, there is Judas, a name that has never made any baby top 100 lists since Jesus’ time.  This is noteworthy because Jesus chose to hang out with these guys – they were his people.  Rough around the edges.  Not particularly scholarly.  Probably salty at times.  They likely drank cheap beer on a regular basis. These were real, everyday people that Jesus chose to partner with to change the world.  It was messy and awkward and beautiful.  In the book of Acts, the pool of leadership broadened even more.

            When Jesus instructed his followers to love their neighbor, I’d like to point out two things.  First, there was no asterisk at the end of the “law”.  It wasn’t, love your neighbor unless they make you mad, or disappoint, or offend, or vote for Trump, or vote for Biden, or hurt your feelings, or say it wrong, or root for the Dodgers.  There weren’t any qualifiers on the command, and Jesus live it out.  He stuck with the disciples through thick and thin, including Judas, right up until he left to sell Jesus out.

            The second thing I want to note is that the “love” referenced isn’t Hallmark Channel love.  It is much more than that.  Deep love’s goal is shalom.  Deep love’s methodology is also shalom.  Sometimes love requires holding people to account.  Sometimes deep love comes across as necessary tough love on the recipient.  Sometimes deep love means swallowing pride, issuing forgiveness and grace that is unmerited (which is actually grace’s definition).  Pretty much everything we read in 1 Corinthians 13 is a picture of deep love.  Deep love is not about the recipient, it is about the one offering the love.  We love because we have been loved.  We love others like we have been loved by God.

            Community provides support for the vicissitudes of life. Community makes joys more joyful and suffering more bearable.  We really need each other.  COVID-19 has made that much more difficult than before.  Some have given up on it until limitations are lifted.  Please don’t do that.  You need relational support.  You need to give relational support. Something is better than nothing.  Nothing provides nothing.  Make the call.  Join the Zoom.  Do whatever it takes, just don’t try to go through life alone.

 

Questions to ponder...

1.     When have you experienced true, deeply loving community?  What was the context?  What made it so special?

2.     When have you experienced a breakdown of community? What happened?  Was there anything that could have happened to keep the breakdown from happening?

3.     When have you been a part of redeeming community – when something ugly was faced and the community prevailed?

4.     How do you define the difference between deep love – the way of shalom and the Kingdom of God – and a lesser form of love?

Go Be Jesus: Connecting with God

Note: You can watch this teaching on CrossWalk’s YouTube channel.

“I’m spiritual, not religious.” Have you ever heard someone utter this phrase or something similar?  They love spirituality. Religion?  Not so much. I think there were surely times when Jesus witnessed the abuse of religious leaders that he may have uttered, or grumbled, how frustrated he was with religion.

 

I’ve heard it said that we are not human beings trying to have a spiritual experience as much as we are spiritual beings having a human experience.  I think Jesus was deeply aware of our spiritual nature and our human nature, and that they are meant to exist in tandem, that both are called by shalom toward shalom, invited to practice shalom.

Liminal Space. Kirsten Oates was on a plane to Manilla to support her sister who had just given birth to a very premature little girl who was now fighting for her life.  Halfway through the 15-hour flight, one of the plane’s engines began to fail.  The plane shook violently. Glassware in the galley was crashing down.  People had to hold onto their arm rests to keep from flying out of their seats even though they had their seatbelts fastened.  Kirsten could sense that her body was heading toward passing out – hearing loss, vision beginning to fade.  She employed a meditation technique to calm herself down because, she noted, she didn’t want to die unconscious.  While the plane continued to thrash about, she maintained her technique and was transported to an experience of “Liminal Space” where the Spirit of God brushes against physical existence.  In that space she found deep peace and a sense that no matter what, should she live or die, either path would be okay.

The Why of spiritual practice: tying into the Source of everything.  There is a universal desire, I think, for an inner peace, or, as the Apostle Paul stated in his letter to the Philippians, a peace that passes understanding.  The kind of peace that Paul refers to – and Jesus modeled – is nor some form of escapism for the purpose of simply escaping reality.  While I am certain we human beings have myriad forms of escaping – various substances you drink or smoke or shoot, rigorous exercise, sex, porn, Netflix, maybe some combination of all the above – I am confident that Jesus practices something different that actually resulted in the opposite of escapism. Jesus was remembered as being devoted to practices that fostered a deep, abiding relationship with God that actually thrust him more deeply into life – not retreat from reality.

In one remembered discourse, Jesus spoke of the importance of staying connected to God:

 

     "Live in me. Make your home in me just as I do in you. In the same way that a branch can't bear grapes by itself but only by being joined to the vine, you can't bear fruit unless you are joined with me.

     "I am the Vine, you are the branches. When you're joined with me and I with you, the relation intimate and organic, the harvest is sure to be abundant. –  Jesus, John 15:4-5 (The Message)

 

This is not shallow escapism for a moment – Jesus is saying that staying connected to God serves to produce a mature, whole, abundant life!  Who wouldn’t want that?

Spiritual practices that foster this ability to live in such liminal space allow us to be more readily present to the Presence of God.  When we choose to live in the footsteps of Jesus, which is a way of life that stays connected to the Spirit of God, we are much more likely to be in the flow of God, to be in touch with God, to be able to see and hear and respond to God.  The more accustomed we become to the way of the world around us that does not often foster such an orientation, the harder it is to be in the flow.  When we order our lives in ways that foster our relationship with the Divine, however, things come online.  We no longer wonder if God exists like a fish pondering the existence of water, because we wake up and realize that we are swimming and living in the presence of God – we are immersed in it – we are in it and it is in us.  This is a key part of what Jesus meant when he referred to the idea of being born again – so much more than simply signing off on a theological construct!

One day CrossWalker Pam Reuter was driving around running errands when a song came over the radio.  She had never heard it before.  Something about it struck her so much that when she was able, she contacted the radio station to help her figure out the name of the song.  After digging around awhile, the radio station identified the song: “You Know Me Better” by the band Stars Go Dim.  She couldn’t figure out why the song struck her so. It just did.  Months later she got a call with some very bad news – a house she owned and was renting out was on fire!  She rushed to the scene as the firefighters were doing their best to put it out before the house was completely destroyed.  Luckily, nobody was hurt, but it was devastating news.  She was naturally exasperated.  When it finally time to leave the scene, she slumped into her car and turned on the ignition.  Immediately, the song, “You Know Me Better” began to play.  She wept.  For her in that moment it came as a loving, comforting message from God: I am with you. I am confident that when we are not tuned in to God such things can be totally lost on us.  When we shape our lives more and more in ways that foster our relationship with God, the more likely we are to recognize the “water” we are swimming in, and Who we are swimming with!

Pam listens to music that supports her faith.  A lot of people are transported by music.  What we listen to helps shift our attention off of lesser things and can ground us.  Sometimes the lyrics of songs can present a new distraction, but sometimes they foster greater attention on our relationship with God.  I love Jeremy Riddle’s “Full Attention” – it helps focus my attention on my relationship with God. The songs don’t have to be Christian or religious, either.  There are some secular songs that speak very deeply into the Way of the Spirit, and some instrumental songs can be effective because they don’t have lyrics that could distract us. 

Jesus was fond of being outside, and no wonder: the creation itself reflects the nature of the Creator!  There is much to gain from simply observing just about any aspect of creation, from the smallest flower or bug or animal to the grandest displays our eyes can hold.  Jesus directed the attention to the flowers in the field and the birds in the air – both held by God beautifully, both teaching us something about life and living in creation, held by the Creator. CrossWalker Karie Nuccio is a nature junkie.  She made a spot for herself where she lives to immerse herself in creation, and it works.  A huge fan of Yosemite, she always pays a visit to where John Muir built his cabin, with a full view of Yosemite Falls.  John Muir, a deeply spiritual man, didn’t hike, he sauntered.  The conservationist who left his footprints throughout the Sierra and Alaskan frontier knew not to rush, but to appreciate what we before him every step of the way.  Take note.  Muir once wrote:

     “Walk away quietly in any direction and taste the freedom of the mountaineer. Camp out among the grasses and gentians of glacial meadows, in craggy garden nooks full of nature’s darlings. Climb the mountains and get their good tidings, Nature’s peace will flow into you as sunshine flows into trees. The winds will blow their own freshness into you and the storms their energy, while cares will drop off like autumn leaves. As age comes on, one source of enjoyment after another is closed, but nature’s sources never fail. Like a generous host, she offers here brimming cups in endless variety, served in a grand hall, the sky its ceiling, the mountains its walls, decorated with glorious paintings and enlivened with bands of music ever playing. The petty discomforts that beset the awkward guest, the unskilled camper, are quickly forgotten, while all that is precious remains. Fears vanish as soon as one is fairly free in the wilderness.”

 

Serving others is also a pathway to getting outside of yourself, connecting you with others and God.  CrossWalker Keith Ridenhour came across some stats that says people who help others are happier people.  That makes sense!  Keith uses his gift of music by giving weekly concerts at nearby nursing care facilities. When there, he makes it his aim to spread joy in his interaction.  He’s added phone calling to his repertoire, realizing that when he calls someone to check in, both leave the experience feeling better.

I love learning stuff.  There have been many times that I have experienced God speaking into my life, open new doors, giving me new insights, through books, seminars, and various other education-oriented experiences.  If that’s you, you know what I mean.  

As good as all of the above is, I would be remiss if I did not note what is probably a required practice for those who want to more deeply engage liminal space where we readily experience the Presence of God.  I was first introduced to contemplation when I was a young adult – late teens as I recall.  I read Richard Foster’s classic, Celebration of Discipline, which provided me with an overview of mostly contemplative practices.  It changed my life, and still does.  I have discovered that quiet contemplation takes me to places of intimacy with God deeper and fast than anything else.  In our noisy culture, it takes discipline to learn and practice, but it is not accidental that every religious tradition promotes it, and every spiritual great became so largely due to it.  Practices that include solitude, stillness, and silence are imperative, and understanding what we need in our contemplation is helped as we appreciate our personality type.

I am an Enneagram junkie.  As a Type 3, I try to excel at it!  Different types benefit from pursuing some specific nuances of contemplation.  Those in the feeling center, like myself, really need solitude – being alone – because so much of who we are is tied to responding to what we sense about those around us.  Personality types in the thinking center need to embrace silence, giving their minds a rest on all it continually processes.  Personality types in the body center will find particular power in stillness, unbusying themselves from where their attention has taken them.  For more insight on the Enneagram in general as well as how to incorporate contemplation into your life given your type, I highly recommend The Sacred Enneagram: Finding Your Unique Path to Spiritual Growth by Christopher Heuertz and Mindful Silence: The Heart of Christian Contemplation by Phileena Heuertz.

When we enter into contemplation, you can be sure that you will face the basic temptations Jesus faced when he went into the wilderness.  Distractions of the body, control, ego, and power will reveal themselves.  Their presence doesn’t mean you are failing, it means your being human.  Continue to breath, to center, to focus on becoming united with the Spirit of God.  Thomas Keating, a contemporary champion of all things meditation, suggests a meditation focused around the phrase, “I love you.”  As you inhale, repeat the phrase as if you are hearing God say this to you.  On the exhale, repeat the phrase as if you are saying it to God.  Spending time with the phrase can have remarkable calming, healing, centering, empowering, renewing effect on our lives.  Don’t take my word for it – try it out!

I regularly use the Lord’s Prayer as a model for meditation.  Going through each section shapes me, ground me.  I come out of the meditative approach to the Lord’s Prayer feeling back on track with God, no longer feeling whatever distance I may have felt previously.  Try it out!  Instead of rushing through it, spend time on each movement:

 

Our Father, Who art in Heaven, hallowed be Thy Name.

Thy Kingdom come, Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven.

Give us this day our daily bread.

Forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us.

Lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evil.

For Thine is the Kingdom, and the Power, and the Glory forever! Amen.

 

Jesus said that by remaining connected to the vine we will bear much fruit.  It’s not why we’re staying connected – it is, rather, a biproduct of being united with God.  CrossWalker Linda Murphy has learned the discipline of meditation and has experienced the grounding it brings.  From such experience, she has also born fruit in the form of her poetry:

 

Come Away

 

When all I see is suffering,

The bleeding and the war cries;

When all I hear is trumpeting hate speech,

Poisonous to my soul;

When all I feel is a pain-racked body,

Bleeding my brain of cognition;

 

I turn to an inner voice that says:

 

“Come away with me,

Into my heart

Into the safety of my realm;

Come away from your tear-stained windowpane,

Into the sunlit fields of childhood;

 

Come away and let me hold you,

Till your body dissolves into Oneness,

Where the truth of who you are

Does not struggle;

Where fear releases on

The rhythms of your breath;

Where, beneath everything,

Is this forgotten foundation of joy.”

 – Linda Kay Murphy, 2020

 

Amen.

Go Be Jesus: Grace and Justice, Part 3

Note: You can watch this teaching on CrossWalk’s YouTube channel.

The core of this teaching is from Rev. Dr. Jeffrey Haggray, Executive Director of the American Baptist Home Mission Society. So good. Then Pete offers some process work at the end with the following questions:

  1. The blind man knew what he hoped Jesus could transform - sight. What would you like to see transformed inyour life?

  2. Jesus involved the blind man in the transformation process, instructing him to wash in the pool of Siloam. What might Jesus be instructing you to do to collaborate toward transformation? How might you find out?  Who could you ask for help?

  3. Some in the blind man’s community were not supportive of his transformation – systems don’t often like change.  Have you ever been transformed only to have your “system” challenge it?

  4. How can we be encouragers of transformation in our systems?

Go Be Jesus: Grace and Justice, Part 2

Note: You can watch this teaching on CrossWalk’s YouTube channel.

Bart only knew what it was to be blind (John 9).  He couldn’t see from birth.  Everybody in the community speculated why God would give his parents such a child.  Most agreed it was a curse from God for some infraction on their part or a generation before.  There were not a lot of options for Bart in that day and age.  He likely learned to cope with the senses he had left, but his only hope of subsistence was begging.  The deck was literally stacked against him – he was limited by something he did not choose and did not want. His state was largely out of his control.

Bart could tell you the day that all changed, when Jesus came upon him and heard his story.  Bart wanted a better life, apparently, but he never caught a break.  Jesus asked him what he wanted (an interesting question – he didn’t assume to know the answer).  Bart said he wanted to see, which would lead to a whole lot of change-for-the-better in his life.  Jesus treated him with a method they both understood and left him with instructions to go wash his eyes.  When he did, he could see. The healing was a gift of empowerment to begin living a new life.

Have you ever felt like you were dealt a bad hand from day one?  Like your very potential was cursed from the beginning?  Maybe you’ve even cursed God for it, knowing you didn’t do anything to deserve your fate.  The Good News of Jesus is that the curse was never from God, and that God is with you even if others have told you otherwise your entire life.  Do you know what you want, really? It’s a real question.  When what you want is directly related to your True Self – who you were created to be in all of your made-in-God’s-image-glory – expect some things to shift.  God is with and for your True Self because it’s aligned with shalom.  You can let go of whatever guilt and shame you’ve carried.  You may have even sinned a time or two for good reasons.  Be free to live – this is God’s Good News of grace to you in Jesus.

Justice.  The ones who were questioning “Bart” were the leaders of Judaism.  They were quite unsettled by what Jesus did on multiple levels – all of them disturbing.  First, a man born blind – a curse from God – was uncursed.  Who has the authority to do such a thing except God?  What does that say about Jesus?  Second, the means Jesus used to head – the mud-dough – required a direct violation of Sabbath law.  How is it that a blatant sinner could be used so powerfully by God?  Third, the miracle did not include the religious leaders in any way, or their sacred space.  What are the implications of all of this?  What if word got out about this?  How would that impact their authority? Bad news for them was Good News for all people, who realized that God was with them as they were, where they were, with shalom.  This gave access to God to everybody, which is a justice issue.

Dan could tell you his story, when the first sign of a very long death sentence appeared on his hand (Matthew 8).  It wasn’t something he wanted – who would want leprosy?  He could only ignore and hide it for so long.  Once it was known, his life was forever changed.  Only distanced contact with family and friends while at the same time being thrust into a new community of fellow sufferers. Isolated until the skin disease subsided, his life was over.  Especially if it really was leprosy, which didn’t show up in the ANE until about 100 years before Jesus was born.  While leprosy itself wasn’t a sin and didn’t mean you were a sinner, contracting it was often associated with God’s will, and likely insinuated that you had done something to warrant such a sentence.  Once contracted, mishandling the disease was considered sinful.

            Dan could tell you the day he sinned that led to his healing.  He approached Jesus and fell to his knees before him, begging for healing.  Hmmm.  What do we have here?  Someone who had been publicly shamed and forever quarantined – God-damned – came out of the colony and dishonored social distancing – a clear infraction.  A God-damned sinner.  Literally. Instead of rebuking him, Jesus empathized with him, welcomed the intimate exchange, and granted the request.  Dan was healed.  The sin was forgiven and the damnation absolved.

            Have you ever felt like Dan?  Like you’ve acquired a condition that has separated you from others in devastating ways? Maybe those who have pushed you out have even thrown down the God card, making you feel as God-damned as Dan.  Hard to have hope in that situation.  Maybe your skin is clear, but you feel tainted in others’ eyes.  The Good News declared by Jesus is that you are not God-damned but God-loved.  You are welcome in the presence of God because God’s presence is loving and welcoming.  There is healing for you here.

            Justice. The leper broke the law and his reward was healing.  Jewish leaders would be deeply disturbed by the theological implications of such an event – what would this mean for others who they instructed needed to “get right with God” before God could heal?  What did it mean that the healing did not in any way include the official, so-called “God-ordained” religious leadership who learned about the healing publicly, after the fact?  How embarrassed they must have been!  Once again, people connected the dots: God is with people as they are, where they are, with shalom. Equal access to God was a justice issue and everybody paying attention knew it.

            Grace never imagined her life would become so awful (John 8).  Things went from bad to worse as her poverty forced her into prostitution.  She had mouths to feed and no recognizable alternatives.  What she had hoped would be a one-time-emergency maneuver became her work and her reputation.  She would never be more than a town whore.  

She was unaware that she had been set up to create a trap for Jesus.  She just thought it was another trick.  But that afternoon she was caught in the act.  Somehow her “John” slipped away and she was left alone with a bunch of religious leaders who treated her with great indignity, not even allowing her to put clothes on.  Instead, they dragged her to where Jesus was teaching and threw her in front of the crowd, an object lesson and test for the provocative teacher.  “The Law says we should stone a woman caught in the act of adultery, what do you say?”  It was a chess game.

A lot of weird things happened that became a blur.  Jesus said whoever was sinless should throw the first stone (usually it was the accuser/plaintiff), and then doodled in the dirt.  Everybody left the scene with no stones thrown.  Left alone with him, she heard him ask where the accusers were.  She noted that everyone left without condemning her.  He then said, “Neither do I condemn you.  Go and leave your life of sin,” which is a way of saying, “Go now and live.”

Have you ever felt like the path you chose had led you to a serious rut in your life, like you are trapped by past bad decisions?  People are sometimes really awful about such things, never letting you forget who you are or what you did and treating you accordingly.  The Good News of Jesus is that your past doesn’t have to dictate your future. Shalom means there is hope for a new beginning, a fresh start – you don’t have to return to living apart from life.  You can live directly from the source.  Accept the grace and move forward.

Justice.  Such an awful scene here.  Jesus was surely frustrated and angry as he watched the religious leadership who were supposed to be agents of loving and healing people instead use their power to create more harm for someone already beaten down.  They had no pity, no compassion, and certainly no empathy. They used her just like every “John” she ever met.  Only worse, since they wore their religious garb as they did.  Such adherence to the law with no regard to grace or the people involved – this was an awful, disrespectful thing to do to Jesus, too – misrepresented God plain and simple. Their violence was what caused Rome to strip them of the right to execute those they condemned – the leaders of faith!  This also represented a kind of spiritual abuse as it promoted a singular way of reading scripture and demanded adherence or expect condemnation.  Jesus’ response was brilliant, showcasing his knowledge of the Law and the savvy to deal with such abusers.  The woman was treated incredibly unjustly, and Jesus saved her from it.  Imagine what those who were there took away?  No doubt, the religious leaders were deeply threatened – they just got humiliated at their own game. And, once again, everybody learned that God loves people as they are, where they are.

Zach was a dirtbag, a cheater of his own people (Luke 19).  He was a tax collector in Jesus’ day, on contract with the Roman Empire to deliver the required assessments from his own people.  He was seen as a traitor.  He was hated for it.  He was also loathed because everybody knew he could get away with robbing his own for his personal profit.  He had climbed his way up the ladder and was filthy rich.

One day he heard that Jesus was coming into town, and he wanted to see him for himself.  Being short, he climbed a tree – he was a climber, after all!  What would Jesus say?  How would he be treated? Jesus saw him and called him out of the tree.  He invited himself over for dinner at Zach’s home, a statement that let Zach know that forgiveness had arrived that day, and there was plenty for Zach.  

Sometimes we turn on those we are supposed to love.  Motivated by selfish interest, we abandon others for personal gain. Relationships are broken or severed.  A lot of pain is created in the process.  We self-medicate with the spoils of our decision, yet it leaves us empty.  It feels like there is no way back.  The Good News of Jesus, however, is that the reset button is always available.  God is one who is always supportive of helping people get things back on track, of living into the True Self they were created to be.  The way forward may be challenging, but the bright side is, there is a way forward!  We are not simply the product of our poor past decisions.

Justice.  The injustice in this story was carried out by a Jewish traitor (of sorts) against his victims.  By inviting himself over to dinner, Jesus was communicating to Zach that he was loved by God as he was, where he was.  The response to such grace served to correct the injustices Zach had carried out so many times, in accordance with Jewish Law. What else was modeled here?  Restorative justice, instead of retributive justice.  The latter is the popular method used the world over, and, unfortunately, by religion itself. It demands retribution, punishment.  Such a system feels like justice gets served.  But not much healing comes of it.  Restorative justice, however, seeks to restore, to heal, and in this case, it apparently did.  What a different approach.  The take-home lesson would include the point that there can be justice – people paid for the wrongs they suffered – and the wrongdoer can also be made right.

If this is what Jesus was engaged in, what should the implication be for those who strive to follow in his footsteps? What reaction might we expect from those who benefit from systems of injustice?

 

Stuff to meditate on from Richard Rohr... 

 

Some simple but urgent guidance to get us through these next months.

I awoke on Saturday, September 19, with three sources in my mind for guidance: Etty Hillesum (1914 – 1943), the young Jewish woman who suffered much more injustice in the concentration camp than we are suffering now; Psalm 62, which must have been written in a time of a major oppression of the Jewish people; and the Irish Poet, W.B.Yeats (1965 – 1939), who wrote his “Second Coming” during the horrors of the World War I and the Spanish Flu pandemic. 

These three sources form the core of my invitation. Read each one slowly as your first practice. Let us begin with Etty:

There is a really deep well inside me. And in it dwells God. Sometimes I am there, too … And that is all we can manage these days and also all that really matters: that we safeguard that little piece of You, God, in ourselves.

—Etty Hillesum, Westerbork transit camp

Note her second-person usage, talking to “You, God” quite directly and personally. There is a Presence with her, even as she is surrounded by so much suffering.

Then, the perennial classic wisdom of the Psalms:

In God alone is my soul at rest.
God is the source of my hope.
In God I find shelter, my rock, and my safety.
Men are but a puff of wind,
Men who think themselves important are a delusion.
Put them on a scale,
They are gone in a puff of wind.

—Psalm 62:5–9

What could it mean to find rest like this in a world such as ours? Every day more and more people are facing the catastrophe of extreme weather. The neurotic news cycle is increasingly driven by... narcissistic leader[s] whose words and deeds incite hatred, sow discord, and amplify the daily chaos. The pandemic that seems to be returning in waves continues to wreak suffering and disorder with no end in sight, and there is no guarantee of the future in an economy designed to protect the rich and powerful at the expense of the poor and those subsisting at the margins of society. 

It’s no wonder the mental and emotional health among a large portion of the American population is in tangible decline! We have wholesale abandoned any sense of truth, objectivity, science or religion in civil conversation; we now recognize we are living with the catastrophic results of several centuries of what philosophers call nihilism or post-modernism (nothing means anything, there are no universal patterns).

We are without doubt in an apocalyptic time (the Latin word apocalypsis refers to an urgent unveiling of an ultimate state of affairs). Yeats’ oft-quoted poem “The Second Coming” then feels like a direct prophecy. See if you do not agree:

Turning and turning in the widening gyre
The falcon cannot hear the falconer;
Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
The best lack all conviction, while the worst
Are full of passionate intensity.

Somehow our occupation and vocation as believers in this sad time must be to first restore the Divine Center by holding it and fully occupying it ourselves. If contemplation means anything, it means that we can “safeguard that little piece of You, God,” as Etty Hillesum describes it. What other power do we have now? All else is tearing us apart, inside and out, no matter who wins the election or who is on the Supreme Court. We cannot abide in such a place for any length of time or it will become our prison.

God cannot abide with us in a place of fear.
God cannot abide with us in a place of ill will or hatred.
God cannot abide with us inside a nonstop volley of claim and counterclaim.
God cannot abide with us in an endless flow of online punditry and analysis.
God cannot speak inside of so much angry noise and conscious deceit.
God cannot be found when all sides are so far from “the Falconer.”
God cannot be born except in a womb of Love.
So offer God that womb.

Stand as a sentry at the door of your senses for these coming months, so “the blood-dimmed tide” cannot make its way into your soul.

If you allow it for too long, it will become who you are, and you will no longer have natural access to the “really deep well” that Etty Hillesum returned to so often and that held so much vitality and freedom for her.

If you will allow, I recommend for your spiritual practice for the next four months that you impose a moratorium on exactly how much news you are subject to—hopefully not more than an hour a day of television, social media, internet news, magazine and newspaper commentary, and/or political discussions. It will only tear you apart and pull you into the dualistic world of opinion and counter-opinion, not Divine Truth, which is always found in a bigger place.

Instead, I suggest that you use this time for some form of public service, volunteerism, mystical reading from the masters, prayer—or, preferably, all of the above.

        You have much to gain now and nothing to lose. Nothing at all. 
        And the world—with you as a stable center—has nothing to lose.
        And everything to gain. 

Go Be Jesus: Grace and Justice, Part 1

Note: You can watch this teaching on CrossWalk’s YouTube channel.

Bart only knew what it was to be blind (John 9).  He couldn’t see from birth.  Everybody in the community speculated why God would give his parents such a child.  Most agreed it was a curse from God for some infraction on their part or a generation before.  There were not a lot of options for Bart in that day and age.  He likely learned to cope with the senses he had left, but his only hope of subsistence was begging.  The deck was literally stacked against him – he was limited by something he did not choose and did not want. His state was largely out of his control.

Bart could tell you the day that all changed, when Jesus came upon him and heard his story.  Bart wanted a better life, apparently, but he never caught a break.  Jesus asked him what he wanted (an interesting question – he didn’t assume to know the answer).  Bart said he wanted to see, which would lead to a whole lot of change-for-the-better in his life.  Jesus treated him with a method they both understood and left him with instructions to go wash his eyes.  When he did, he could see. The healing was a gift of empowerment to begin living a new life.

Have you ever felt like you were dealt a bad hand from day one?  Like your very potential was cursed from the beginning?  Maybe you’ve even cursed God for it, knowing you didn’t do anything to deserve your fate.  The Good News of Jesus is that the curse was never from God, and that God is with you even if others have told you otherwise your entire life.  Do you know what you want, really? It’s a real question.  When what you want is directly related to your True Self – who you were created to be in all of your made-in-God’s-image-glory – expect some things to shift.  God is with and for your True Self because it’s aligned with shalom.  You can let go of whatever guilt and shame you’ve carried.  You may have even sinned a time or two for good reasons.  Be free to live – this is God’s Good News of grace to you in Jesus.

Dan could tell you his story, when the first sign of a very long death sentence appeared on his hand (Matthew 8).  It wasn’t something he wanted – who would want leprosy?  He could only ignore and hide it for so long.  Once it was known, his life was forever changed.  Only distanced contact with family and friends while at the same time being thrust into a new community of fellow sufferers. Isolated until the skin disease subsided, his life was over.  Especially if it really was leprosy, which didn’t show up in the ANE until about 100 years before Jesus was born.  While leprosy itself wasn’t a sin and didn’t mean you were a sinner, contracting it was often associated with God’s will, and likely insinuated that you had done something to warrant such a sentence.  Once contracted, mishandling the disease was considered sinful.

            Dan could tell you the day he sinned that led to his healing.  He approached Jesus and fell to his knees before him, begging for healing.  Hmmm.  What do we have here?  Someone who had been publicly shamed and forever quarantined – God-damned – came out of the colony and dishonored social distancing – a clear infraction.  A God-damned sinner.  Literally. Instead of rebuking him, Jesus empathized with him, welcomed the intimate exchange, and granted the request.  Dan was healed.  The sin was forgiven and the damnation absolved.

            Have you ever felt like Dan?  Like you’ve acquired a condition that has separated you from others in devastating ways? Maybe those who have pushed you out have even thrown down the God card, making you feel as God-damned as Dan.  Hard to have hope in that situation.  Maybe your skin is clear, but you feel tainted in others’ eyes.  The Good News declared by Jesus is that you are not God-damned but God-loved.  You are welcome in the presence of God because God’s presence is loving and welcoming.  There is healing for you here.

            Grace never imagined her life would become so awful (John 8).  Things went from bad to worse as her poverty forced her into prostitution.  She had mouths to feed and no recognizable alternatives.  What she had hoped would be a one-time-emergency maneuver became her work and her reputation.  She would never be more than a town whore.  

She was unaware that she had been set up to create a trap for Jesus.  She just thought it was another trick.  But that afternoon she was caught in the act.  Somehow her “John” slipped away and she was left alone with a bunch of religious leaders who treated her with great indignity, not even allowing her to put clothes on.  Instead, they dragged her to where Jesus was teaching and threw her in front of the crowd, an object lesson and test for the provocative teacher.  “The Law says we should stone a woman caught in the act of adultery, what do you say?”  It was a chess game.

A lot of weird things happened that became a blur.  Jesus said whoever was sinless should throw the first stone (usually it was the accuser/plaintiff), and then doodled in the dirt.  Everybody left the scene with no stones thrown.  Left alone with him, she heard him ask where the accusers were.  She noted that everyone left without condemning her.  He then said, “Neither do I condemn you.  Go and leave your life of sin,” which is a way of saying, “Go now and live.”

Have you ever felt like the path you chose had led you to a serious rut in your life, like you are trapped by past bad decisions?  People are sometimes really awful about such things, never letting you forget who you are or what you did and treating you accordingly.  The Good News of Jesus is that your past doesn’t have to dictate your future. Shalom means there is hope for a new beginning, a fresh start – you don’t have to return to living apart from life.  You can live directly from the source.  Accept the grace and move forward.

Zach was a dirtbag, a cheater of his own people (Luke 19).  He was a tax collector in Jesus’ day, on contract with the Roman Empire to deliver the required assessments from his own people.  He was seen as a traitor.  He was hated for it.  He was also loathed because everybody knew he could get away with robbing his own for his personal profit.  He had climbed his way up the ladder and was filthy rich.

One day he heard that Jesus was coming into town, and he wanted to see him for himself.  Being short, he climbed a tree – he was a climber, after all!  What would Jesus say?  How would he be treated? Jesus saw him and called him out of the tree.  He invited himself over for dinner at Zach’s home, a statement that let Zach know that forgiveness had arrived that day, and there was plenty for Zach.  

Sometimes we turn on those we are supposed to love.  Motivated by selfish interest, we abandon others for personal gain. Relationships are broken or severed.  A lot of pain is created in the process.  We self-medicate with the spoils of our decision, yet it leaves us empty.  It feels like there is no way back.  The Good News of Jesus, however, is that the reset button is always available.  God is one who is always supportive of helping people get things back on track, of living into the True Self they were created to be.  The way forward may be challenging, but the bright side is, there is a way forward!  We are not simply the product of our poor past decisions.

Meditation:

Upon Thy Altar

Psychotherapist Carl Jung believed wounded healers developed insight and resilience from their experiences which enabled the emergence of transformation to occur. African American philosopher, theologian, educator, and civil rights leader Howard Thurman (1900–1981) was a living example of such insight for this week’s Practice. With tenderness and pastoral concern, he reminds us that one of the most important aspects of healing is the process of offering our wounding to God. We invite you to take several slow, deep breaths to settle your body and calm your mind; then read Thurman’s words slowly and contemplatively, either voiced or within the silence of your heart.

 

Our Little Lives 

Our little lives, our big problems—these we place upon Thy altar!
The quietness in Thy Temple of Silence again and again rebuffs us:
For some there is no discipline to hold them steady in the waiting
And the minds reject the noiseless invasion of Thy Spirit.
For some there is no will to offer what is central in the thoughts—
The confusion is so manifest, there is no starting place to take hold.
For some the evils of the world tear down all concentrations
And scatter the focus of the high resolves.

War and the threat of war has covered us with heavy shadows,
Making the days big with forebodings—
The nights crowded with frenzied dreams and restless churnings.
We do not know how to do what we know to do.
We do not know how to be what we know to be.

Our little lives, our big problems—these we place upon Thy altar!
Brood over our spirits, Our Father,
Blow upon whatever dream Thou hast for us
That there may glow once again upon our hearths
The light from Thy altar.
Pour out upon us whatever our spirits need of shock, of lift, of release
That we may find strength for these days—
Courage and hope for tomorrow.
In confidence we rest in Thy sustaining grace
Which makes possible triumph in defeat, gain in loss, and love in hate.
We rejoice this day to say:
Our little lives, our big problems—these we place upon Thy altar!

Howard Thurman, Meditations of the Heart (Beacon Press: ©1953, 1981), 83‒84.