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WOUNDED HANDS

4/27/2014

 
John 20:19-29
Later on that day, the disciples had gathered together, but, fearful of the Jews, had locked all the doors in the house. Jesus entered, stood among them, and said, “Peace to you.” Then he showed them his hands and side.
The disciples, seeing the Master with their own eyes, were exuberant. Jesus repeated his greeting: “Peace to you. Just as the Father sent me, I send you.”

Then he took a deep breath and breathed into them. “Receive the Holy Spirit,” he said. “If you forgive someone’s sins, they’re gone for good. If you don’t forgive sins, what are you going to do with them?”

But Thomas, sometimes called the Twin, one of the Twelve, was not with them when Jesus came. The other disciples told him, “We saw the Master.”

But he said, “Unless I see the nail holes in his hands, put my finger in the nail holes, and stick my hand in his side, I won’t believe it.”

Eight days later, his disciples were again in the room. This time Thomas was with them. Jesus came through the locked doors, stood among them, and said, “Peace to you.”

Then he focused his attention on Thomas. “Take your finger and examine my hands. Take your hand and stick it in my side. Don’t be unbelieving. Believe.”

Thomas said, “My Lord!  My God!”

Jesus said, “So, you believe because you’ve seen with your own eyes. Even better blessings are in store for those who believe without seeing.”
This story of Doubting Thomas only appears in John’s gospel.  We so often focus on the story of this doubting man that we overlook a great deal more that is here in this brief story.

First, there is Thomas’s extraordinary exclamation: my Lord, my God!   My “God”?  Now, where did that come from?  We’ve had Peter’s answer to Jesus’ question of who Peter believes he is: you are the Christ, the Messiah, but neither of those are “God.” 

We need to know here that this is John’s gospel and the writer of John makes no bones about his belief in the full divinity of the Christ.  This is, after all, the gospel which begins:
In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God,
and the Word was God... 
And then goes on to identify the “Word” with Jesus, the Christ.

The other three gospels never (or only obliquely) make this claim for Jesus.  In them, Jesus is God’s Son, the Chosen One - but never co-existent with God’s self.   He is Lord, and Master, but none of these go as far as God.  Among the four gospels, it is only in John’s gospel that we find this complete identification of Jesus the Christ as the 2nd person of the Trinity.  In time the church will develop this more fully, but that is later, as second, third and fourth generation Christians struggled to identify just who this was who lived and died and then lived again among them.   And so Thomas’ cry is no surprise when we remember who is telling this particular story.  This is a theological point that we could talk about for the next several months – but not today, because there are other things I think are important to say about this reading.

We are so caught up here in the miraculous fact of a dead man walking into the room – through the locked door – that we never seem to question “why” he has come.  When we re-read the story and bother to ask that question we realize it wasn’t just to pop in and say, “hey, look - I did it - pretty cool, huh?”  

Jesus has come here to the disciples with the express intention to send them out and back to work doing the good work out there in the world.  He breathes his Spirit in them and tells them to get up off their posteriors and go back to work – his work.  There is a world waiting out there for what they have to give.  As in the other gospel accounts, he appears to remind them they can do this because he is with them and will always be with them and then he sends them out.

All week while I have been thinking about this reading I’ve also been remembering St. Teresa of Avila’s famous prayer:
“Christ has no body now on earth but yours,
no hands but yours, no feet but yours.
Yours are the eyes through which to look out
Christ's compassion to the world.
Yours are the feet with which he is to go about doing good;
Yours are the hands with which he is to bless men now.”

I’ve been thinking about a story I shared last week.  Some of you weren’t here last week so I’m going to quickly share it again, so we’re all on the same page. 

On the day before Easter, Hilary and I were in Sacramento – actually in Rio Linda, one of the poorest areas of greater Sacramento – where Hilary was performing for a benefit concert given to bring in food and money for a local food pantry there.  

The person who organized this whole thing is a friend of Hilary’s – and he is not one you would necessarily recognize right off if you met him on the street as one who cared about doing Christ’s work.  But you’d be very wrong.  Billy is an ex-meth-head, and ex-heroin addict, a tough-looking guy – who is also a man who believes and cares deeply about the poor of his world.  When he was welcoming everyone and thanking them for coming he made a statement that just blew me away.  He said: Tomorrow is Easter, but today YOU are the second coming because today you are here helping to do Christ’s work on earth.  

Hold on to all these thoughts, for a minute, but now, back to Doubting Thomas. 

Thomas may be, after Peter, the most well-known among the disciples because he expresses – right there in front of God and everybody – all the doubts the rest of us feel.  All the fear that keeps us from accepting the wonderful news that God really does care for us. Thomas just can’t believe that Jesus had really been there with the others in the flesh.  So Jesus comes in again when Thomas is there and sticks out his hands and says, “Take your finger and examine my hands.  Take your hand and stick it in my side.  Don’t be unbelieving.”

“Take your finger and stick it in the holes in my hands.”  Think about that – Jesus is risen, he is right there living and breathing again - but the hands he holds out to Thomas are still wounded.  They have not miraculously healed.

Now, lets take all the bits and pieces I’ve put out here in the last few minutes: Jesus coming back to send his followers out into the world to do his work.  Jesus’ wounded hands.  St. Teresa’s prayer that “Christ has now on earth no hands but yours.”  And Billy’s reminder that we – no matter how battered about by life we may be – are the 2nd coming of Christ when we are doing his good work.  When we add in Paul’s later teaching that we are the Body of Christ - the body Jesus said was broken ... it all seems pretty clear to me: we are the hands of Jesus – the wounded hands of Jesus.  We are wounded – but so was Jesus.  Wounded or not, we are the ones he told to “believe” and then sent out to do his work.  Our woundedness can no longer be our excuse – instead, it is to be our very power and our glory.

I think about the reading off and on all week, and Hilary and I occasionally talk about our thoughts on the reading.  Then on Saturday when I sit down at the computer to actually write this message out and try to order my thoughts into some coherent pattern, Hilary, being an extrovert, talks through his thought process, and so is in and out all morning interrupting me and  bringing me his work and asking me to proof it and see if it works or not – until it all gets pretty confusing and sometimes it’s hard to know whose thoughts are whose – but this I know is Hilary’s because I copied it right off his paper, because I like the way he said it here:
the 2nd coming
has happened, 
is happening, 
will happen
as long as we allow 
the wounded hands of Jesus,
  our hands,
to do the work of Christ on earth.

                       (Rev. Hilary F. Marckx, PhD)

EASTER -- LOVE WINS

4/20/2014

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Matthew 28:1-10
After the Sabbath, as the first light of the new week dawned, Mary Magdalene and the other Mary came to keep vigil at the tomb. Suddenly the earth reeled and rocked under their feet as God’s angel came down from heaven, came right up to where they were standing. He rolled back the stone and then sat on it. Shafts of lightning blazed from him. His garments shimmered snow-white. The guards at the tomb were scared to death. They were so frightened, they couldn’t move.

The angel spoke to the women: “There is nothing to fear here. I know you’re looking for Jesus, the One they nailed to the cross. He is not here. He was raised, just as he said. Come and look at the place where he was placed.

“Now, get on your way quickly and tell his disciples, ‘He is risen from the dead. He is going on ahead of you to Galilee. You will see him there.’ That’s the message.”

The women, deep in wonder and full of joy, lost no time in leaving the tomb. They ran to tell the disciples. Then Jesus met them, stopping them in their tracks. “Good morning!” he said. They fell to their knees, embraced his feet, and worshiped him. Jesus said, “You’re holding on to me for dear life! Don’t be frightened like that. Go tell my brothers that they are to go to Galilee, and that I’ll meet them there.”
In many ways this started out as a horrible week.  I left church last Sunday excited and happy after our wonderful discussion and when I got home, turned on the computer to check the news I hadn’t taken the time to read before church.  That was my first mistake because I was met with the report of the neo-Nazi who had murdered three innocent people for the “crime” of being Jewish – all while shouting “Heil, Hitler!”  For some reason, that just threw me over the edge.  I mean, “Heil, Hitler” for Pete’s sake ... How long ... how long do we have to carry around the same old, ugly hatreds before we can ever put them to rest?  

Then all week long there were the Ukrainians and the Syrians, happily bombing and gassing each other – and those despicable cowards  who hide behind the name “Muslim” –  when they have no more to do with Islam than Neo-Nazis do with Christianity – they’re still determined to kill off everyone who isn’t them – especially school girls – scary things, school girls.  Hatred, it was all too  obvious, is alive and well today on planet Earth.  And all this while I am working on a “celebration” for today.

Hatred is alive and well, just as it was alive in Jesus’ day, and in all the days in-between.  And yet ..... we are gathered here this morning not to mourn the presence of hatred, but to proclaim that – in spite of hatred’s best efforts -- love wins!  

Jesus walked among us and taught and healed among us to show us that, in spite of what sometimes seems to be, it is love which always has and always will win.  My friend Flora Wuellner has recently released her latest book – her 8th or 9th or so – titled Beyond Death: What Jesus Revealed about Eternal Life, and she sent Hilary and me a copy, which I am currently reading.  In it she describes Jesus’s earthly mission as being “to bring heaven, the fullness of God’s realm, into our daily lives, relationships, choices.”   I love that – Jesus’s mission, if I'm reading Flora correctly, was less to get us into heaven, as the church has taught for 2000 years, than to get heaven into us – to place the living love of God into us – God's living, breathing, acting love in us.

Jesus faced plenty that was ugly when he was here among us, but he never gave up his focus on the love of the one he called Father.  He saw hatred and greed and hopelessness and selfishness and envy and fear aplenty, but still, the God he knew so deeply and personally was not, in his vision, about retribution or revenge or punishment — but always about love.  Love is what he came to offer us ... to give, and to give, and to give – in spite of our deep clinging to our old fears and hatreds.  And in spite of all that hatred had to throw at him, love is what Jesus did give us in return. 

Love spoke in all his teaching and healing.  Love hung on that hideous cross.  And love it is that lives again in each and every one of us – loving and being through and in us.

Love is why we exist.  Love – I believe – is what God is.  And everything that comes from God is the result of that love.  Love creates.  All that is flows from the creativity of God’s love.  Love supports, love nourishes, love builds – and love invites – invites us to live here and now in that heaven which is the ultimate expression of God’s love.  Love is why Jesus exists.  Love is why Easter is so important – more important, really, than Christmas.  Love is why we are here .....

And so hatred – for all its nagging, petty ugliness – for all its persistence in the world – for all its seeming inevitable-ness – hatred loses.  Always has, always will.  Because the life-giving Creator who brought everything into being is determined to love us all into wholeness.  And – as Easter proves again today -- love always wins.

I took the title for this message from Rob Bell’s book, titled “Love Wins” – because that book was and is a reminder to me that God’s love is stronger than death, stronger than hate.  It’s easy to lose that in the midst of the world’s news, but it’s true.  Love wins.  It’s not some heavy, convoluted theological dogma – it’s two short words.  Easy to carry around with you every day: Love wins.  I want to end today with the blessing with which Bell ends the book:
“May you experience this vast, expansive, infinite, indestructible love that has been yours all along. May you discover that this love is as wide as the sky and as small as the cracks in your heart no one else knows about. And may you know, deep in your bones, that love wins.”
Happy Easter!
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WE ARE HARVEST, WE ARE HUNGER

4/16/2014

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Some scripture quotes on Harvest/Hunger:

Sirach 6:18-20
My child, from your youth choose discipline,
  and when you have gray hair you will still find wisdom.
Come to her like one who plows and sows,
    and wait for her good harvest.
For when you cultivate her you will toil but little,
    and soon you will eat of her produce.
She seems very harsh to the undisciplined;
    fools cannot remain with her.

Nehemiah 9:15
For their hunger you gave them bread from heaven, and for their thirst you brought water for them out of the rock, and you told them to go in to possess the land that you swore to give them.

Matthew 5:6
Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they will be filled.

Luke 10:2
He said to them, “The harvest is plentiful, but the laborers are few; therefore ask the Lord of the harvest to send out laborers into his harvest.

2 Corinthians 9:10
He who supplies seed to the sower and bread for food will supply and multiply your seed for sowing and increase the harvest of your righteousness.

James 3:18
And a harvest of righteousness is sown in peace for those who make peace
Some notes to begin discussion:


I don’t have too much difficulty seeing us a both the ones harvesting AND as those being harvested ourselves – God has planted good seed in the world, and if we are trying to be the product of good seed, then we are going to be part of what God harvests - the living Kingdom of God, while at the same time being called to help with harvesting – gathering in – others.

And I can see us being hungry and being driven by our hunger to seek for God - we hunger and thirst for righteousness – but it is much stranger to envision myself as HUNGER – and I’m not sure where I go with this concept.  

‘Hungry’ is an adjective.  I’m OK with that.  And ‘hunger’ as an active verb “I hunger” - I’m goon with that, too.  But ‘hunger’ as a noun - which is what the song is saying -- “we are hunger” - that one puzzles me.  

Unless it is that I become so deeply involved in being hungry for God and God’s righteousness that I become, in effect, hunger itself walking in the world, seeking – and working for – the reign of  God – the full expression of the justice and righteousness of God’s kingdom.
“The place God calls you to is the place where your deep gladness and the world’s deep hunger meet.”  ~~  Frederick Buechner
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QUESTION, CREED and ... FORGIVENESS?

4/13/2014

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Mark 15:6-15
Now at the festival Pilate used to release a prisoner for them, anyone for whom they asked.  Now a man called Barabbas was in prison with the rebels who had committed murder during the insurrection.  So the crowd came and began to ask Pilate to do for them according to his custom.  Then he answered them, “Do you want me to release for you the King of the Jews?”  For he realized that it was out of jealousy that the chief priests had handed him over.  But the chief priests stirred up the crowd to have him release Barabbas for them instead.  Pilate spoke to them again, “Then what do you wish me to do with the man you call the King of the Jews?” They shouted back, “Crucify him!”  Pilate asked them, “Why, what evil has he done?” But they shouted all the more, “Crucify him!”  So Pilate, wishing to satisfy the crowd, released Barabbas for them; and after flogging Jesus, he handed him over to be crucified.


Today is Palm / Passion Sunday – but it is also the last couplet in our series: We are Question, we are Creed.   Hopefully, we can make these all fit together in one discussion.

We Disciples are somewhat unique within Christianity in that we do not have a codified creed.  We actually hold a belief in diversity of opinion, wherein – and I quote – “each person is free to determine their own belief guided by the Holy Spirit, the Bible, study and prayer.”  But most of Christianity adheres to a creed of one name or another.  We Disciples believe most of the same things but do not make membership contingent on acceptance of the creed.

When the Christian faith was still quite new creeds were an easy way to state just “who we are” and why we aren’t the same as “them.”  But as church became bureaucracy, creeds became a tool of legalism and a means to enforce “the rules” as interpreted by whoever was in power at the moment.  They even became reasons for wars and killing each other.  Questions were – and still are in many circles – viewed with suspicion – as something to be silenced by an even stricter enforcement of the creed.

This brought about a Christianity that I suspect Jesus would not recognize.  It is the mindset he was up against throughout his earthly ministry – when the Pharisees constantly sought to catch him out in some broken legalism.  His refusal to mindlessly follow the rules without understanding “why” was, in short, the reason he was killed.  He threatened the positions of those who had the most invested in control by legalism.

When questions are forcibly suppressed, it becomes dangerous to seek any deeper meaning in one’s faith.  Just recite the creed and leave it at that.  Don’t consider looking at the question from any but the orthodox position.

This often leads us to take the simplest answer – which may be ‘true’ – but rarely holds all the richness and beauty and breadth of a more nuanced discussion.  We humans tend to pin God into smaller and smaller boxes – containing God within the smallest possible image – because to do so is easier for us – and easier to control.  And we seem to be more comfortable with a God that we can contain and control.  But what do we lose by this?

Ask the average Christian and they will tell you that Jesus came to die for our sins – that’s the proper “approved” answer – (But that’s a whole other sermon – I mean, really?  Jesus had to die before God could be forgiving?  Really?)  and yet, when we take the time to read the gospels, Jesus said very little about sin – and a whole lot about invitation and healing and forgiveness.  In all honesty, I don’t believe anyone has ever been “saved,” or set free by adherence to a creed.  We are saved by God’s limitless, wild and unconstrained love – and that is what Jesus gave us in his life and in his death.

I chose this reading for today for two reasons: the first is that there is so very much here that begs for forgiveness; and second because of this little reading from Frederick Buechner, which is what set me to thinking of all this in the first place:

     Pilate told the people that they could choose to spare the life of either a murderer named Barabbas or Jesus of Nazareth, and they chose Barabbas. Given the same choice, Jesus, of course, would have chosen to spare Barabbas too. 
     To understand the reason in each case would be to understand much of what the New Testament means by saying that Jesus is the Savior, and much of what it means too by saying that, by and large, people are in bad need of being saved.

So - a couple of points to ponder: The people who saw and heard Jesus had all sorts of opinions about him.  They called him Teacher, Prophet, King, Seditionist, son of God, Messiah...and crazy.  Each person had to decide for themselves who he was.  Some looked deeply, others hardly looked at all – at least not beyond the end of their own comfort zone.

Second point: Everyone of these names comes up somewhere in the Palm / Passion stories.  In the spread of this week, Jesus goes all the way from praise and adoration (Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord!) to something to be discarded like garbage (Crucify him! Crucify him!)  

I mentioned last week that when I was a child Holy Week made me feel horribly guilty – but it that really what it is about?  Is this story meant to make us feel guilty that “Jesus died for us” or is there something else here for us?  Is there, perhaps, understanding and forgiveness and love?



[Open discussion]
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    Picture

    Rev. Cherie Marckx

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