Sunday, March 29, 2020
Thursday, March 26, 2020
Lent: The Blind Man
Genesis 2:4-8
John 9:1-11
Meditation:
We start the season of Lent with
ashes, ashes of last year’s palms, ashes of the past, ashes of things that have
died, and we remember that we are dust and to dust we shall return. But over the past few years, when I mark the
sign of the cross in ashes in other’s foreheads, I cannot say those words: to
dust we shall return, instead, I use the words:
the old is gone, in Christ we are a new Creation. Lent is a spiritual
spring, is a time of renewal, it is a time to name the old that we seek to shed
and live into the promise that in Christ
we are a new creation. Last week, we had
the woman at the well, and in Christ, she became a new creation. Today, we have a blind man and with his
encounter with Jesus he too will encounter a new season in his own life.
Words
from Ash Wednesday involve: Almighty
God, you have created us out of the dust of the earth. Remember that you are dust, and to dust you
shall return. These words take us all
the way back to the story of creation, the story of God creating Adam and Even
in the Garden of Eden. God creates, then the Lord God formed man from the
dust of the ground,[b] and
breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and the man became a living
being. The name Adam comes from the Hebrew word Adamah which means dirt,
ground, red clay.
The
other day, as we were doing our school distance learning, my younger one read
about an animal called a Pika. She
immediately decided she was madly in love with this little creature and wanted
to make one of her own. So what did we
do? We pulled out the clay and created a
very unique little Pika. Just as God
creates out of the dust, we too create, and clay is just one medium for us to
express our creative outlet. This story,
creating out of dust, creating out of clay, is one that the potter can relate
to. Throughout the world, people use the
dust of the ground, the dirt, the natural clay, and make useful items out of
it.
When
we take the time to stop, to think about our connection to God and our
connection to creation, we need to be reminded from time to time that we are
the soil, we are the air, we are what we eat, which depends on the nutrients in
the ground, the sun, and the rain.
So,
not only does God create Adam out of the dust of the ground, God then breathes
life into him. God does not just create
Adam and place him in the garden, there is this intimate connection – God’s
breath into Adam creating life. One of
my college roommates would always say:
Breathe in the good, breathe out the bad. I think this is a good mediation in the stress
we are living in today. A form of
meditation to help us deal with anxiety.
But we should also remember that as we breathe in the good, we are
breathing in the breath of God.
Dirt
and breath bring life at the crack of creation, and Jesus parallels this very
act of creation in his encounter with the blind man. As Jesus and his disciples encounter this
man, born blind since birth, the disciples ask Jesus a theological question –
who sinned, this man or his parents.
They lived in a day and age where they connected everything to God. If someone was born blind, deaf, or lame, it
was connected to some sort of divine punishment. But instead of divine punishment, Jesus is
telling them that this man’s blindness is now going to be used for God’s glory. Jesus takes what is currently seen as a
negative from God and is teaching that it is actually a positive. This man was born blind so that God’s work
might be revealed in him.
Yesterday,
George to the Rescue was on the TV and I was only partly listening. But he was doing a room remodel for a young
woman that was blind. Apparently, there
is also a youtube personality that is a young blind woman. Blindness can create many stresses in a
person’s life including depression. The
one woman, through her youtube channel had brought hope and renewal to the life
of the other person. It renewed her
desire to focus on her passion which is swimming and her goal of participating
in one of the upcoming Olympic games.
There was no mention of God in this story, at least none that I heard,
but in the sharing of hope, in the sharing of life still has meaning despite
being blind, in the encouragement of engaging in one’s passions, the Kingdom of
God was at work. God’s work was being
revealed through them.
So,
as Jesus approaches this man, he continues to teach his disciples and tells
them: I am the light of the world. Last week, Jesus described himself as the
Living water. Water, light, two
essential things that life needs to grow.
And then he spits on the ground and mixes it with the dirt, the dust,
and creates mud. Sound familiar? The Light of the world takes the dust of the
ground, infuses it with his salvia, and places it on the blind man’s eyes. Could we be, just for this moment in time,
back in the garden of Eden? Then he
tells the man to go and wash. But Jesus
does not seem to stick around for the conversation that entails
afterwards. When Jesus heals, sometimes
we hear him say, your faith has made you well.
But not here. There are no more
words from Jesus to this man – just go and wash in the pool. In a sense, Jesus passes the baton onto this
man to tell the story. And he will be
questioned over and over again. Miracles
are hard to accept, even when they are right in front of you.
The
religious authorities are having a fit.
They want to know how Jesus opened his eyes. The very people that are suppose to be the
most connected to God, that know the scripture inside and out, cannot connect
the story of creation to this man’s healing.
We get ourselves into our own rigid set of beliefs and understandings
that we can actually prevent ourselves from seeing God at work. I like to open to the mystery of God. Instead of trying to make sense of it all, I
like to think that God can do new things, that the creation story is not a
thing of the past but an on-going story.
For the blind man, in Christ, he became a new creation, the old was gone
and he had been made new.
We
may not ever experience such an easy to define miracle of the blind man, but in
Christ, in the ways God works in our lives and transforms us, we are living
miracles and just like Jesus proclaimed the glory of God was to be shown
through the healing of the blind man, our lives too should proclaim the glory
of God through our own stories, our own healings whatever they may be, our own
understanding of how, in Christ, we are a new creation. Amen.
Tuesday, March 24, 2020
Sunday, March 15, 2020
March 15, 2020 - 3rd Sunday of Lent
Good morning and welcome to our first on-line worship
service. As we gather at this time, we
remember that we are still community, whether we can be together in person, or
if we are together in spirit.
Congregations all across the country are experimenting with this form of
worship today because we believe we should gather and worship and take time to
quiet ourselves and redirect our anxieties, stresses, concerns back towards our
loving God. So, this is the time to
breathe and be assured that even though times feel anxious, the sacred is still
around us and is still with us and we are still called to be the body of Christ
in this time. Welcome, welcome to this
sacred time.
Today’s scripture is the story of
the Samaritan woman at the well:
Two weeks ago, on the first
Sunday of Lent, we had the story of Jesus in the Wilderness. The wilderness is often thought of as a harsh environment,
dry, hot, depending on where you are. When
I think of this wilderness scene, I definitely envision a desert type of environment. As Jesus fasts for these forty days, he must
have had some sort of water source, I can’t imagine forty days without food,
but just the thought of even one day without water makes my mouth feel dry. I am sure we all know the feeling of being
thirsty and fortunately, for the most part, we have easy access to water.
Fourteen years ago, I had the
opportunity to go to Kenya with the Presbytery Nairobi Partnership team. During that time, we made sure we stayed
hydrated but when I got home, I had a headache that would not go away. After going to the doctor, I learned that I
was dehydrated. Even though I had been
drinking what I thought was enough water, it was not. So, we added some electrolytes into my system
and I immediately began to feel better.
So, here we have this transition,
of Jesus being in the wilderness to a story of him, passing through Samaria,
and encountering a woman at the well in the middle of the day. This is one of those passages that has so
many angels in which to tackle. Jesus should
not be in Samaria. Jesus should not be
speaking to a woman. And this woman should
not be at the well at mid day. So, all
these things that should not be happening – are happening.
Jesus starts the conversation by
asking for a drink of water. He asks her
to offer him hospitality. As the
conversation unfolds, and the breaking of social customs is named, Jesus uses
the opportunity to teach her about who he is.
He uses the metaphor of water and connects it to himself. Jesus, from the dryness of the wilderness, is
describing himself as the living water.
The water that I will give will become in them a
spring of water gushing up to eternal life.” 15 The woman said to him, “Sir, give me this water,
so that I may never be thirsty or have to keep coming here to draw water.”
This past Thursday evening at the Lenten dinner,
we have been talking about what it means to be spiritually hungry. Here is a woman, that is spiritually
thirsty. In a simple conversation of a
man who sees her as a person, that has not labeled her as a Samaritan or a
unclean woman or an outcaste, in the simple act of receiving water from her,
Jesus changes her life. She is so alone
and this stranger saw her as something more than anyone else around has ever
seen her. And now she understands her
thirst. She is thirsty, thirsty to be
seen, thirsty to be in a community that will accept her, thirsty to understand her
purpose and worth, thirsty to know God.
And as all of this rises to the surface, in this one conversation, she
runs from Jesus and goes back to the community that does not accept her and proclaims: 29 “Come and see a man who told me everything I have
ever done! He cannot be the Messiah,[e] can he?”
As we journey through this season of Lent, things
are not unfolding the way I had planned for them to unfold. But that is okay, the Holy Spirit
is still with us and is still at work and is still guiding us. We may feel for the next few weeks that we
are in the wilderness. The wilderness
that I had wanted to use as the place where seeds and eggs are in the right environment
to hatch or germinate. And then, as the season
of wilderness ends, and a new season begins, as the caterpillar hatches or the
seed germinates, there is a hunger, and there is amazing growth. When these caterpillars arrived on Monday,
they were tiny. In just one week, they
have more then quadrupled in size. The only
way for them to grow like this is to eat.
This is the season to spiritually eat, or spiritually drink. As the woman at the well breaks out of her
shell, out of the bonds of the labels that have held her captive within her
community, as her wilderness comes to an end, she thirsts. She and the caterpillar are wired the same
way. Shed the egg, the shell, the
hardness that holds us back, and drink in God’s love for us. Chew on the word of God, find ways for your spiritual
hunger to be fed. We are called to
growth, no matter what age we are, God has given us the living water. If you thirst, if you hunger, that means the Holy
Spirit is with you, is nudging you, is calling you into a new season of faith. Just like the caterpillar cannot ever become
an egg again, we too can only go forward.
And God provides the food and drink that we need to engage this season
of life.
In the wilderness of the next few
weeks, stay hydrated. We may not be able
to meet together as a people in one place, but we can make phone calls to each
other, we can email, send letters, pray, and spend time reading scripture and even
engage in various spiritual practices. I
will do my best to send ideas out to you.
Amen.
Monday, February 10, 2020
When did we see you Naked?
When did I see you Naked?
This past summer, on our mission staycation, we looked at When did we see You naked, as those who are most vulnerable. Who are those that need shelter? And another resource I just found interprets the naked as those in poverty. But as we look at this specific topic, we can think about the various agencies that are indeed, clothing people. This past week on the moms of morris facebook page, there was a post that one of the local colleges is starting a clothing closet for professional clothing. So, when college students, who are usually financially strained, have interviews, they can come to the clothing closet for interview clothing. How we present ourselves, at least for interviews, can impact whether or not we are chosen for a job. There are several other agencies out there with the same vision. Dress for Success is probably the best known and I know my local YMCA collected for them last year. When did we see you naked? Well, we might not actually see people naked, but perhaps we can see the challenges people face when trying to take the next step to employment and can assist with an outfit that looks professional.
There are also numerous churches and agencies that provide clothing to people. When I first started here, I thought Roxbury Social Services just provide food through their food pantry. I had no idea they had clothes as well. Our deacons were purchasing new sweatshirts for the clients of Faith Kitchen. In Dover, there is a program out the Episcopal church called North Porch and they focus on providing diapers and baby clothing. And Market Street Mission is one of the few places that really focuses on men’s clothing. As the men graduate from their program, they will need professional clothing as well.
But when did we see you naked can also include blankets. This past summer, we started to make fleece blankets for the men at Market Street mission. When they come in off the street, they often have just a few items and a fresh and clean blanket is a real gift. Because the program can only handle so many men at a time, the first step in getting into the program involves sleeping on the floor in the main room. A blanket can really help make sleep just a little more comfortable. And what about bathing items, collecting soap and shampoo, razors, deodorant, toothbrushes and tooth paste, and towels. There is always a need.
And what about laundry? There is a ministry called: Laundry Love where congregations will actually sponsor an evening at a local laundry mat and pay for the clients to have their clothes cleaned. And the last time I was at Triennium, I met a pastor with a ministry called: Sacred Spark, that works directly with the homeless and one of their ministries is laundry. She has the children’s programs all throughout the region collecting quarters so that they can do the laundry for those living in the homeless camps. As much as we might complain about doing laundry, having clean clothes is important. And maybe you are like me, I love the smell of fresh sheets on my bed. I can’t imagine never having the ability to put fresh sheets on my bed.
So, what does responding to those who are lacking in sufficient clothing have to do with being the salt of the earth and letting our light shine? Well, I see it saying two things. The first is that when we let our light shine, or when we are the salt of the earth, we respond to the needs of others. We listen and hear what is lacking or what will be most beneficial for someone to be self sufficient and we respond. But I also see it as for the other. God wants everyone’s light to shine. It can be hard to shine with your full potential if you cannot afford clothes for a job interview. When I started my first pastoral position in Charlotte, I invested in two good outfits for Sundays, but I could not afford to have designer clothes for the rest of the week. I did what I could, but another pastor would comment on my clothes. What do you think that did to the light within me that was trying to shine?
One of my favorite stories is of a young woman I got to know in Dover. She would always wear oversized sweatshirts and would often pull the hood up over her head. She started attending the church and after several months, her self confidence began to grow. A few people paid attention to her. One family let her come over and do laundry. She began to shine. She started to wear other types of clothes and no longer hid behind a hood. You don’t put a light under a basket. She might have been homeless, living on the fringes, but she is still a child of God with a light worthy of shining. There are so many positive stories other there, from Dress to Success to Market Street Mission of people being able to take the next step in being self sufficient due to the generosity of others.
Monday, January 20, 2020
When did we see you Thirsty?
John 1:29-42
Congregational Vitality
Over the next six weeks we will
spend time on what it means to be a Matthew 25 congregation. Our session voted to join the denomination on
this movement last spring and our summer mission adventure last summer focused
on the passage as we examined what it means when we ask the questions: When did we see you hungry, or thirsty, when
did we see you a stranger or naked, when did we see you in prison or sick? These six areas are very clear ways to be in
ministry, to care for others. But what
is not so clear are the three areas that the denomination has broken this
movement into: Congregational vitality,
eradicating structural racism, and systemic poverty.
Today,
we are going to focus on congregational vitality. I think this is something that is near and
dear to all of our hearts. We truly want
this congregation to be vital. So,
directly from the Matthew 25 website I share this: You might think
that the vitality of a congregation or worshiping community is based on the
number of members, the scope of programs, the size of financial gifts or some
other statistics.
Not so — at least not
entirely.
Rather, a community’s
vitality is primarily its spiritual strength and its capacity for purposeful
mission. Congregational vitality is evident in a worshiping community when its
structural systems, finances and discipleship practices are aligned in such a
way that the community is actively engaged in the mission of God in their local
community and the world, and they are powerfully focused on growing as
disciples in the way of Jesus Christ. Faith comes alive when we boldly engage
God’s mission and share the hope we have in Christ.
And so we need to ask
ourselves: are
we spiritually exhausted, financially fragile and structurally unsound? And if we are, what can we do about it? The first, spiritually exhausted needs to be
held in distinction from just being exhausted.
I think as a society, we are exhausted.
But sometime, out of doing ministry and feeling exhausted by it, we are
actually spiritually renewed. So, we
need to pay very clear attention to what energizes us and what really causes us
deep exhaustion. Does Olde Suckasunny
Day zap our energy and our spiritual strength?
Or do we engage in the day feeling a greater connection to our community
and energized by our fundraising and efforts to be a visible presence in our
neighborhood? Mission trips are always
good examples of being physically exhausted but spiritual energized. So, as we move forward this year, the
question we need to ask ourselves before engaging in any sort of activity,
ministry, or event is – how will this impact us spiritually?
Are we
financially fragile? Yes, and no. We are learning to do ministry within our
means and are blessed by a yearly bequest as well as other legacy gifts to the
church. Could we be more financially
sound? Absolutely, and we have been
praying about the ways in which to share our building with the greater
community. Are we structurally
sound? Yes. We have a strong leadership within the
church, we have committees and ministry teams that function, and our building
itself is in good shape. Is there more
that can be done, absolutely. But when
we put our minds to something, it really seems to happen.
I want us to hold this statement: vitality connects to purposeful mission. And I
want us to remember that Jesus started his ministry with just a few people and
probably very little money. Last week
was Baptism of the Lord Sunday when Jesus is baptized by John the Baptist. Today’s passage occurs the very next
day. John is spending time with his
disciples and Jesus is still in the area.
They see him walk by and John describes him by calling him “the Lamb of
God”. It seems as if John’s description
is enough to get his disciples’ attention and the two of them go towards
Jesus. Jesus senses that they are
following him and he engages them by asking:
What are you looking for? Seems
to me to be a rather strange way to start a conversation. There are no introductions or basic
greetings, but a straight forward question.
And they don’t answer him, but rather, they give him a title: Rabbi, and ask him a question: Where are you staying? And his response: Come, and see. So they do and they stay visiting for him for
the day.
One of these two men was named Andrew and Andrew
has a brother known as Simon Peter or Peter.
After his day spent with Jesus, Andrew leaves and goes to find his
brother Simon Peter and tells him: We
have found the Messiah. And not only
does he tell him who he believes Jesus is, he brings his brother to meet
Jesus. Vitality connects to purposeful
mission. Andrew believes there is
something purposeful with Jesus and he wants his brother to be included.
As we think about congregational vitality, I want
us to also think of the word thirst.
When did we see you thirsty? We
could focus on the numerous places around the world and even right here in New
Jersey where people do not have clean drinking water. But for congregational vitality, I want us to
focus on spiritual thirst. From the
Beatitudes: Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for
righteousness, for they will be filled.
And from the Psalm we heard read today:
As a deer longs for flowing streams, so my soul longs for you, O God.2 My soul thirsts for God, for the living God.
According
to the Matthew 25 information on Congregational vitality, there are seven
marks, seven ways to determine if your congregation is vital, or it can be seen
as seven ways to move the congregation towards vitality.
Congregational vitality grows out of
discipleship, and to be a disciple of
something you should thirst for it, long for it,
desire it. The Psalmist writes: my soul
thirsts for God. And Andrew, a
fisherman, a man who spent his days upon the water, thirsted for something
more. First, he is with John the
Baptist, learning from him, then he gravitates towards Jesus, thirsting even
more, finding in him the place he desired to invest himself, and not only
himself, but his brother as well. The
second mark of congregational vitality is evangelism, which is what Andrew does
as he goes and finds his brother proclaiming to him: We have found the Messiah.
This
passage concludes with yet one more mark of congregational vitality: Empowering every
member to discover their individual calling and the gifts God has given them so
they can go forth and serve. When Simon Peter arrives, Jesus gives him a
new name. You are to be called Cephas” (which is translated
Peter[l]),
and it also means rock. The future
church will be built very literally, on the rock of Peter. So, just in this one passage we have three
marks of a vital congregation: Discipleship, evangelism, and empowerment. And that congregational vitality is based on
purposeful mission. These first
disciples of Jesus are a part of a mission, to share that Jesus is the Messiah,
that God’s promised has been fulfilled.
Monday, January 13, 2020
Baptism of the Lord - Sermon
A New Thing
This past
Halloween, I learned that there are some new names out there for our youth to
gravitate towards or away from. Andi
would not tell me what she was dressing up as for Halloween. So, when the night arrived, and she was
dressed in her pretty normal clothes, all accept for her hair, which she had
done up with lots of extra barrettes, I had to ask her, “Please, explain.” She responded: I’m a soft girl. And that was as much information as she would
give me. So, luckily for me, I know two
middle school young ladies here at the church and they became my inside source. So, when I asked Kylie and Kendra about Soft
Girls, they burst out laughing and filled me in with the scoop. Except, they gave me even more information. There is apparently another type of girl
called a VISCO girl. A VISCO girl uses a
hydro flask water bottle. She is all
about saving the turtles, and wears hair scrunchies. Oh my.
The best I could make of this was the Valley Girl movement back when I
was in middle school. So, I googled it
and learned a bit more. And then for
Christmas, Andi went full VISCO on me by asking her grandparents for the hydro
flask and other VISCO girl accessories.
So, what does this all mean? Identity.
It means identity. And I was
concerned that it could mean creating labels about people in order to poke fun
at them, belittle them, or even dress up like them for Halloween. Identity and labels are all around us. Some of them are good and some of them can be
damaging, humiliating, and demeaning. I
just spent the last two days at two separate events addressing the negative
consequences of identity and labeling others when it takes the form of
Anti-Semitism, or racism. At least twice
in my own life, I have been given derogatory names. To think, someone had to do that. To say or in one case write out words aimed
at deeply offending and hurting. And for
some, this is a life long attack. To see
symbols of anti Semitism in one community, impacts the greater Jewish
community. Over and over and over
again. The pain is real, and it is raw, it
is part of an atrocious history and to think, that someone has to make a choice
to behave in such a way as to dehumanize or degrade another. And the same holds true with racist comments,
jokes, and statements.
One of the commentaries I read shared that we are
living in a day and age where our labels are dividing us more and more. We are using labels to point fingers at each
other, generalizing people into larger categories even if they don’t belong
there. Unfortunately, that has also
happened with the word Christian and Church – too many people have lumped us
all into one label and pointed a finger calling us hypocrites and intolerant of
others.
As we think about who we are as people gathered
here in worship, it is really not about who we are, but about whose we
are. And this Sunday, the Baptism of the
Lord Sunday, reminds us who Jesus is, his identity, that he is the Beloved. And when we are baptized, we are named as children
of God, children of the covenant, that is our label, beloved by God. We are created by God, named by God, and
loved by God. Even when the world deals
us the worst day of our lives, we belong to God. And that should be what unites us. We are diverse in so many ways, but what
brings us together, what gives us our strength as the body of Christ in this place
is that we are children of God, it is not our political views or our stand on
issues, or how we dress, or our sexual orientation or our age. And yet, we can use these things to pull
ourselves apart from each other.
Together, in baptism, God calls us, to work together,
to pray together, to worship together, and to remember we are God’s
children. Here in this place, we are to
set aside any and all labels that can divide, and put our energy, and our love
towards serving God and one another. And
we are to work towards the healing of the impact of anti-Semitism and Racism both
in our local community and the greater world.
Has your name as child of God been meaningful in
your own life journey? Has it given you
the strength you might need to get through rough times? Has it been a positive reminder that you
belong to God and that there is nothing that can separate you from the love of
God? If you have never thought about the
full impact of your baptism on your daily journey, take time to think about it.
And what about the identity of our church? We have tried to name our identity through
our mission statement. Last year we created two areas of focus that would
enhance our identity – that we would grow in our fellowship with each other and
our mission in the world. This year, we
are, in a way, focusing on baptism. We
believe baptism is an important part of our faith, and we are going to intentionally
reach out to those families that have had their children baptized here within
the past five to eight years if not further back.
Baptism marks the beginning of Jesus’s ministry,
it is part of the new thing God is doing.
We believe God can do a new thing in our lives and in the life of this
church and so we go back to the beginning, to the story of baptism and we
engage it, we engage it for our own story and we go and invite others to
remember their baptism and seek to provide the spiritual nurture for those
seeds that have been planted. Let’s
engage this new year and new decade with a newness of God’s love and the full
understanding that we are children of God and nothing can separate us from God’s
love. Amen.
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