Church of the Open Door:  First Christian Church, Ukiah
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EASTER SUNDAY -- 2024

3/31/2024

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Mark 16:1-8     (MSG)
When the Sabbath was over, Mary Magdalene, Mary the mother of James, and Salome bought spices so they could tend to Jesus’ body. Very early on Sunday morning, as the sun rose, they went to the tomb. They worried out loud to each other, “Who will roll back the stone from the tomb for us?”  Then they looked up, saw that it had been rolled back—it was a huge stone—and walked right in. They saw a young man sitting on the right side, dressed all in white. They were completely taken aback, astonished.

He said, “Don’t be afraid. I know you’re looking for Jesus the Nazarene, the One they nailed on the cross. He’s been raised up; he’s here no longer.  You can see for yourselves that the place is empty.  Now—on your way.  Tell his disciples and Peter that he is going on ahead of you to Galilee.  You’ll see him there, exactly as he said.”  They got out as fast as they could, beside themselves, their heads swimming.  Stunned, they said nothing to anyone.

John 20:1-10       (MSG)
Early in the morning, Mary Magdalene came to the tomb and saw that the stone had been removed from the tomb. She ran and went to Simon Peter and the other disciple, the one whom Jesus loved, and said to them, “They have taken the Lord out of the tomb, and we do not know where they have laid him.”

Then Peter and the other disciple set out and went toward the tomb. The two were running together, but the other disciple outran Peter and reached the tomb first. He bent down to look in and saw the linen wrappings lying there, but he did not go in.

​Then Simon Peter came, following him, and went into the tomb. He saw the linen wrappings lying there, and the cloth that had been on Jesus’ head, not lying with the linen wrappings but rolled up in a place by itself. Then the other disciple also went in, and he saw and believed; for as yet they did not understand the scripture, that he must rise from the dead. Then the disciples returned to their homes.


Christ is risen, Alleluia.  He is risen, indeed, Hosanna!  Alleluia!

The two readings we began with today are the readings for Easter Day.  There are many more stories about Easter but these two represent the very beginnings of human awareness of just what has happened overnight, but so far, Jesus himself has not put in an appearance.

In a short while, Jesus will make himself known to Mary Magdelene, then later there will be an encounter with a couple of followers on the Emmaus road, followed finally by Jesus appearing in the upper room where the terrified disciples are hiding from any identification of them as connected to the executed criminal, Jesus.

But here – right now – what we have is a supposedly dead Jesus (they buried him a couple of nights ago – they know he’s dead), a missing body, and a cluster of despairing disciples.  That is pretty consistent across the gospels.  But from here the additional stories come in from all directions, from all kinds of sources, often appearing in one account but not in any others.

Jesus himself makes no appearance anywhere, in this part of our story.  Jesus hasn’t appeared nor has he spoken a word since the crucifixion.  If we never found another word written about him after this point, what would we think?  What would we believe?

I’m not asking these questions to challenge anyone’s beliefs but maybe just to nudge our understanding of what this is all about.  I think it is, by and large, all too easy to look at the big-theme feast days and holidays like Easter and Christmas almost as if we are watching a movie.  We know the story so well – or at least we think we do.  There’s no big new revelations – but maybe there should be.

So many of us were taught from childhood that Jesus “died for our sins,” but this isn’t really part of the Easter story.  It was an “explanation” added later to account for how he died.  Much of the language that suggests that’s what happened came to us through Paul.

Instead, Jesus lived as we all should try to live – caring for others.  He talked with people, he listened to people.  He saw people – and he healed them.  He healed their broken bodies and their broken souls and their broken spirits because he saw them with love – regardless of who they were...beggars, tax collectors, Roman soldiers, women forced into prostitution, those with broken minds.  He wasn’t dying for our sins because he never saw our sins except as something to be healed.

He was crucified because he threatened the power structure, and even those who would eventually kill him, he tried first to reach and to heal.  In a way, he died because he loved us that much.  He would not stop teaching and healing and leading us even though he knew full well what the cost of this love would be.

He didn’t care about our “sins” – he cared about loving us and making us whole.

And after his death those who loved him and followed him found that they could not continue without him there to lead them, so they found him again in their shared stories and in community and in their own hearts, and he carried on – loving and teaching and healing – through us and in us and with us in each other.

Jesus lives – in each of us.  He is risen and lives on in his people. 

Alleluia!  Amen.  And Joyous Easter!
​

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"PALM SUNDAY - 2024"

3/24/2024

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John 12:9-19
When the ordinary people of Jerusalem heard of Jesus’ presence in their area, they flocked to see him and also to see Lazarus—the man who had come back to life again.

That’s when the chief priests decided they would have to kill Lazarus too, for it was because of him that many of the Jewish leaders had deserted and believed in Jesus as their Messiah.

The next day, the news that Jesus was on the way into Jerusalem swept through the city, and a huge crowd of Passover visitors took palm branches and went down the road to meet him, shouting, “The Savior!  God bless the King of Israel!  Hail to God’s Chosen One!”

Jesus rode along on a young donkey, fulfilling the prophecy that said: “Don’t be afraid of your King, people of Israel, for he will come to you meekly, sitting on a donkey’s colt!”

(His disciples didn’t realize at the time that this was a fulfillment of prophecy; but later, after Jesus returned to his glory in heaven, then they noticed how many prophecies of Scripture had come true right before their eyes.)

Those in the crowd who had actually seen Jesus call Lazarus back to life were telling all about it. That was the main reason why so many went out to meet him—because they had heard about this mighty miracle.

Then the Pharisees looked at each other, and said, “We’ve lost.  Look—the whole world has gone after him!”
​

The story of Jesus’ triumphal entry into Jerusalem on what we now refer to as Palm Sunday is told in all four of the Gospels. 

The events leading up to, or immediately following the main event are not always told in the same detail or the same chronological order – (for instance, the Cleansing of the Temple comes after Palm Sunday in Matthew, Mark, and Luke, but instead happens at the near beginning of Jesus’ public ministry in John’s account.)  But the four Gospel writers provide an otherwise harmonious account.

Tradition has always identified Matthew as a tax collector in the area near Capernaum when he met Jesus; Mark as a Palestinian Jew who traveled at different times with both Paul and Peter; Luke, another traveling companion of Paul, as a Gentile physician, and John, as a Galilean fisherman – one of Jesus’ first called disciples.

Modern Bible scholarship views these identifications as very “iffy” at best, based on interior textual evidence and the broad time span covered.
I’m not here today to day to argue for or against any of these author identities, but simply to point out the broad diversity of the writers of the Gospels – and yet, on the subject of Jesus’ arrival in Jerusalem these four writers (whoever they were) show a remarkable cohesiveness.

Word has gone out that Jesus, that guy they’ve all heard of by this time, is said to have actually raised a dead man back into life.  Whether they had believed what they had heard in the past, or not, this act seems to be a game-changer.  They know some of the people who claim to have been there to witness this very act.  They swap stories among themselves and come to believe it really must be true.  They all gather to get a look at this man who just may be sent by God.  As he draws closer they become ever more caught up in the excitement of the crowd and they believe!   They believe that this one is their Messiah, their Chosen One, David’s son!

Only a few days later, it would all change.

In the aftermath of WWII the question was often posed as to how the German people, who had been seen as a basic, ”normal” people like any others around the world, such a short time before, could so quickly have been turned into the followers of the Nazi horror saga.

The answer, of course is that many did not but were forced to accept it, many rejected it and suffered the punishments themselves.  Others were lied to, many were afraid of losing everything if they didn’t join it.  But many – too many – swallowed it whole and jumped right in to become part of the nightmare.

This is a story as old as humankind.  The story of believing in something or someone as long as it feels safe or even convenient, and then abandoning them as soon as it looks like becoming a threat to one’s comfort or safety.  And it can happen with any of us. 

Few people start out to turn their backs on their beliefs or betray promises they’ve made.  Few expect to find themselves justifying the betrayal of their commitments in exchange for goods or power or safety – and yet it happens. 

This is an unexpected lesson of Lent and Holy Week.  Even Jesus was betrayed by those who loved him one day and betrayed him the next.  Even Peter, before the week would be over, would turn his back on his beloved Lord.  But Jesus carried on, he didn’t turn his back on us.  He knew his calling and he followed it.

If those who loved him best could do it to Jesus, it could happen to any of us.  This may have been Jesus’ lowest moment and certainly a low moment for those who abandoned him.  But grace exists for us all, even in our worst moments.  Grace is always here for us.
​

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"We Want to Meet Jesus"

3/17/2024

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John 12:20-26

Some Greeks who had come to Jerusalem to attend the Passover paid a visit to Philip, who was from Bethsaida, and said, “Sir, we want to meet Jesus.” Philip told Andrew about it, and they went together to ask Jesus.

Jesus replied that the time had come for him to return to his glory in heaven, and that “I must fall and die like a kernel of wheat that falls into the furrows of the earth.  Unless I die I will be alone—a single seed.  But my death will produce many new wheat kernels—a plentiful harvest of new lives.  If you love your life down here—you will lose it.  If you despise your life down here—you will exchange it for eternal glory.

“If these Greeks want to be my disciples, tell them to come and follow me, for my servants must be where I am.  And if they follow me, the Father will honor them.


Today is the 5th Sunday in Lent for this year.  Next Sunday will be Palm Sunday and we will enter into the final days of Jesus’ life here among us, as one of us (in this human form).  While the majority of his time here had been lived in the region of Galilee, he had shifted south into the area in and around Jerusalem in order to participate in a couple of the annual feast celebrations at the Temple.

Scripture gives us a very loose chronology all that goes on in these weeks of traveling back and forth, but in this trip south Jesus did some public teaching in the outer courtyards of the Temple, cured a blind beggar, debated some more with the Pharisees who were still trying to convince everyone that Jesus was a fake, and traveled south from Jerusalem to visit his dear friends, Mary, Martha, and Lazarus in Bethany. While traveling, he received word that Lazarus was near death from an illness, but he stalled several days before going there, and by the time he arrived Lazarus was dead and buried.

After comforting the sisters, Jesus raised Lazarus from his tomb, a story  we are largely familiar with.  Then, knowing this would bring hoards descending on him, when he wasn’t quite ready to deal with that, Jesus left for the Jordan River for a few days, and then, finally, since Passover was drawing near, turned back and led his followers toward  Jerusalem.

This is where our reading for today comes in.
“Some Greeks who had come to Jerusalem to attend the Passover paid a visit to Philip, who was from Bethsaida, and said, “Sir, we want to meet Jesus.” Philip told Andrew about it, and they went together to ask Jesus.”

Jesus’ response was fairly terse:
“If these Greeks want to be my disciples, tell them to come and follow me, for my servants must be where I am.  And if they follow me, the Father will honor them."

But the crux of Jesus’ answer is to be found in the deeper explanation delivered between those two briefer statements:

Jesus replied that the time had come for him to return to his glory in heaven, and that “I must fall and die like a kernel of wheat that falls into the furrows of the earth.  Unless I die I will be alone—a single seed.  But my death will produce many new wheat kernels—a plentiful harvest of new lives.  If you love your life down here—you will lose it.  If you despise your life down here—you will exchange it for eternal glory.

Seeds come in all shapes and sizes but they are generally relatively small things but once they die into the earth new life – multiplied 10, 20,100 times over springs forth from that one seed.  “Unless I die I will be alone—a single seed.  But my death will produce many new wheat kernels—a plentiful harvest of new lives.  

Jesus had said repeatedly by this point that he was here – in this time and place – to die so that God’s people would have new life.  Many did not believe, but many others did – even some of the Pharisees believed that Jesus was the promised messiah.  But telling was never going to be enough, they had to be shown, they had to witness it with their own eyes, and see what would happen now and in the days and months to come.

As I said at the beginning today, next week will be Palm Sunday and we will pick up our story again at this point and enter into Jerusalem for the final time with the people proclaiming him “king” and “lord”.
​

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    Rev. Cherie Marckx

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