Today marks the end of our Lenten journey. Some of us have fasted from a particular food item or behavior. Some of us have spent extra time reading scripture, or other texts designed to enhance our understanding of our faith and our faith journey. Some of us have simply lived our lives in expectation of Easter.
Holy Week begins today, and ends with our Easter celebration next week. Each week, in worship, after our prayer of confession and words of assurance, we have extinguished one candle, to represent the ultimate betrayal of our Lord and Savior at the hands of his closest friends and followers. Each week, our altar space has gotten a little bit darker, to represent our own role in the Christ’s betrayal. A mini tenebrae, in the midst of our Sunday worship. For close to 2000 years, Christians have followed the path of this journey, using Lent to fast in order to focus on Christ’s suffering, or to read in order to be reminded of Christ’s last weeks of ministry, or to perform acts of kindness and charity to honor Christ’s sacrifice. And while there is a general understanding that following that path is a good thing, tradition and custom tells us so, there is nothing explicitly biblical that tells us what we should do during Lent. It’s the early church’s interpretation of scripture that leads us through our days in Lent. Scripture tells us that Jesus began his final journey into Jerusalem riding on a donkey, and on a colt, the foal of a donkey. Two animals at once? That’s interesting. All four gospels describe the triumphal entrance into Jerusalem by our Lord and Savior, and all four note that the disciples laid their cloaks on the donkey and colt, and the crowd laid their cloaks on the ground, with some branches from the trees. But palms are never mentioned. That’s interesting. Custom and culture from those days dictated that a king riding on a horse was riding for battle. A king riding on a donkey was riding in peace. That’s interesting. 2000 years after his entrance into Jerusalem, after his arrest, his torture, after his crucifixion and death, after his resurrection, Jesus continues to remain a most mysterious figure. A charismatic rabbi, able to perform miracles like turning water into wine, healing people with all kinds of diseases, able to raise his friend Lazarus from the dead, all used to illustrate the glory of God. It feels like the world is losing patience with the mystery of Christ. As scholars and scientists argue about what would have been historically accurate, what would have been ‘true’ about the time Jesus lived among us, it feels like people care less and less about the mystery, the paradox of our Lord and Savior. Does it feel that way to you? So much about Jesus is incredible: born of a virgin, able to perform miracles, crucified and killed, only to be resurrected…no science can help us understand the implications of these mysteries. Ultimately, we have to wrestle with them ourselves. We believe or we don’t. But what I believe is that we can never separate the mystery from the person Jesus was, and so there are moments in our faith lives when we must decide whether we believe in Jesus because of what scripture said he did, or because of who he is in our lives. And if we believe in Jesus because of who he is in our lives, then this next week plays a powerful role in our remembrance of his final days on earth. If we believe in him because of what scripture says about him, then we can go through this week with a kind of painless detachment, removed from his painful betrayal, his humiliation, his torture, his sacrifice. We can read about his passion, his trials like a story that has no effect on us. But if we’re on this journey with him, then we’ll feel some of that pain, our cheeks will sting with some of the humiliation he felt. We’ll wash other’s feet, and have our feet washed. We’ll break bread together, and share juice together, like he did, in remembrance of him. Mysterious acts like these can have a profound effect upon our faith lives. The world wants science to tell us if Jesus really did the things the bible tells us he did. Science can’t do that. The world wants historians to tell us if Jesus was really the way the bible tells us Jesus was. History can’t do that. At some point, the faithful have to move beyond science and history, and move into the mystery of our faith. We have to be ok with not knowing for sure, but knowing in our hearts. And there’s a difference, isn’t there? I can’t help but mourn the state of the Christian Church in these modern times, and I can’t help but note that the Christian Church’s problems seem to stem from our inability to put into practice the very things Jesus calls us do. If we practiced loving each other as he loves us, as we love ourselves, if we loved our enemies, if we turned the other cheek, if we loved God with all our hearts, and all our minds and all our souls, the world wouldn’t doubt the truth. But for now, with the advent of Holy Week upon us, we have mystery, and we have hope. We do not have science, or history, or culture, or customs to feed us, we have our own personal faith to lead us into our understanding of the Christ’s ultimate sacrifice for our sins. We can shout Hosanna! today because we already know the rest of the story: we won’t be disappointed when the Messiah turns out to be a peace-loving, peace-preaching peacenik. We can sit at the table with Jesus, and break bread, because we know what he did for us and for our sins, and we know that all are welcome at his table, with no exceptions. We can take risks in the name of our faith, move outside our comfort zone, share our resources beyond what might be prudent, because we have the reassurance and the joy and mystery of Easter morning to back us up. At the end of the day, we have to find a way to be comfortable with the mysteries of our Lord and Savior, be comfortable with the things that don’t make sense, the things that get at the heart of our faith. Not because tradition tells us to, or because it’s the custom of Christians to do so. But because we are learning to embrace the mystery of Christ. At the end of the day, either we have hope in the resurrected Christ, or we do not. Holy Week helps us focus on the paradox of a king, arrested, tortured, humiliated, and crucified, only to triumph over all earthly bounds, and even death itself, in order that you and I might be forgiven. And we are forgiven. And that is the ultimate mystery. Hosanna in the highest indeed. Thanks be to God. Amen.
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Have you ever heard of Christians being called ‘people of the resurrection’? Or ‘the resurrection people’? I have. And I believe it to be true. Most, if not all of our theology hinges on the resurrection of Jesus. We celebrate his birth and his triumph over death, and though it looks like Christmas is the bigger holiday, we all know that Easter is the more meaningful celebration for those who follow Jesus.
Death and Resurrection. A theme that is infused in our faith lives, in our personal lives, in our congregational lives. We all live, and we all die. This is something we are constantly struggling to accept about our existence here on earth. In a literal sense, we are born, we live, and we die. In a symbolic or metaphorical way, things are born, they live, and they die. And sometimes, in very special circumstances, things can be resurrected: brought back to life after death. Medical science has progressed so that people who have stopped breathing, whose hearts have stopped beating, can be brought back from clinical death. Relationships can be resurrected, ideas that we thought were long dead can have new life. The universe shows us that from dead and collapsing stars come black holes, that consume everything around them, and then produce new stars, with renewed energy and vigor. God has created a universe that provides for the possibility of resurrection. We even conceive of the after-life, the eternal life, as a form of resurrection. If you’ve heard me speak at a funeral, you’ll know that I usually mention that the unique energy of a particular person is not really gone. Their spirit, their energy cannot be destroyed, but is in a different form. We think of that different form as a soul or spirit being in heaven. We hope for this, but we do not know for sure. Our Hebrew scripture this morning tells of a time when God commanded the prophet Ezekiel to prophecy to the dry bones in the valley. To preach to them until they rose up. To encourage them until sinews and flesh and breath came upon them again. A resurrection of sorts. And our Gospel lesson recounts the story of Jesus raising Lazarus from the dead. These two stories give us some important clues about how we might proceed as a congregation facing resurrection: we too are facing an ending, at some point in the future, and hope for a new beginning to arise. While the actual gift of resurrection may come from God, or Jesus, did you notice in both of these stories who does all the work? The lay people. People like you and me. God may have been the power behind the dry bones rising, but God had Ezekiel do the work of prophesying to them. Jesus may have been the power behind Lazarus being raised from the dead, but the people gathered were the ones who had to unbind him from his shroud. Whatever form of death may come over our One Worshiping Community, whenever that time comes, we will be the ones who have to preach to the dry bones, and we will be the ones who have to unbind the shroud so that the church can live again. The energy, the spirit that is unique to our congregations will not be gone, it will be in a different form, ready to become whatever God calls us to be. But we will have to do the work! The is a big difference between resurrection and living: God is in charge of the resurrecting, but we are, in fact, in charge of the living part. That’s on us. God provides the spark of life, but we provide the resolve to go on living. God can jumpstart our body, but we have to be the ones that get the food and water, that determine our purpose in our new life. For many, the cycle of death and resurrection seems unnatural, artificial, strange and something to fear. But in the universe, in the world that God has made, it is just another moment in time following the rules God has set upon us. Not unusual at all. As a worshiping community, in covenant with each other, we will be yet another story in a long line of stories about death and resurrection. We have found a unique opportunity to be present and available to God for a new life. Because we’re together, we live. And we will be the ones who will have to unbind the body, who will have to preach to the dry bones of death, so that they may rise again to live a new life in Christ, a new life in God. Thanks be to God, who gives us new life in Christ, the Way, the Truth, and the Life. Amen. |
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