Out of all the Gospels St. John colors a unique picture of Jesus.
This is a Jesus that liberates!
At the wedding of Cana Jesus doesn’t just turn a few stone water pots into wine – Jesus turns six into wine – so we may know the abundance God gives.
Jesus at the well offers living water – so we may never thirst again.
Jesus was sent by God as bread from heaven – so we may never hunger.
Jesus raises Lazarus from the dead – so may know God is not limited by our mortality.
Jesus is the light of the world – so we may never walk in darkness.
All of these are unique to the Gospel of John.
Truth! Freedom!
The harsh reality is that we are slaves to sin. And what is Jesus response?
John 8: 31-36 “If you continue in my word, you are truly my disciples; and you will know the truth, and the truth will make you free... So if the Son makes you free, you will be free indeed!”
As John colors a unique picture of a Jesus who liberates… I can’t help but go back to the days I used to color.
I think of a little child with their crayons and coloring book. They are given a variety of colors and are taught to color in the lines.
A little child maybe given tons of colors, but they pick one. The coloring book may have a picture on it, but they see the whole page not the lines. They put gusto into their coloring and it goes all over the page. Then the child walks up to you and say’s, "Here is my picture!" With the biggest brightest eyes, "I colored this just for you."
How do you respond? I mean you could look at the child and say, "Ummm… didn’t you notice that there are lines to help you color this horse. And didn’t you realize that you have more than just red… there is brown (which is actually the color of the horse) and blue for the sky, green for the grass…"
NO! We don’t say that because we don’t look at the details of the picture we look at the love put into the picture.
We take the picture out of their hands with a huge smile and meaningfully say, "That is beautiful!"
We are coloring a picture for God with our lives. This picture we draw is often outside of the lines. We are good at making a mess. We might have used to much red. We didn’t even realize it was a horse that we were supposed to draw. But with big bright eyes we open our hands to God and say here I am. Here is my life and I drew this for you.
And God says, "That is beautiful!" As God gives us the ultimate grace.
Sure God will occationally show us a new color of life that we may have not noticed or used before, but we pick up the new crayon and try again.
You are loved. You are God’s. And the picture you’re drawing daily maybe imperfect, but you have been made free!
Free from sin, through the divine activity centered in Christ’s death and brought into right relationship with God!
Wednesday, October 28, 2009
Wednesday, October 21, 2009
Liturgy
Rituals give us a way to experience the Holy. We often think of the church as a place rich with ritual. Most Lutheran services start with confession and forgiveness, a cross is processed forward, and the candles are lit. We have communion every Sunday, the elements are uncovered during offering and we end our service saying, “Thanks be to God.” We come to worship knowing we will experience these rituals and be fed to live as disciples in the world.
If we step foot in a new church we will notice a difference in rituals. Maybe they don’t process a cross before the service or have communion every Sunday. Often it is in these small ways that we experience a disruption in our worship. We may think, “Wait we don’t do it that way.” However, no matter what Christian church you worship with there are two things that are steadfast, communion and baptism. Sure we may do those rituals differently – some immerse, some sprinkle water – but the truth is we baptize.
The Eucharist and Baptism are liturgy at the core. The creeds, theories, text and prayers were formed to help worshipers understand baptism, not baptism being created to help understand the creeds and prayers. It was the community’s regular act of Eucharist and Baptism (liturgy) that brought about a theology to help understand and reflect on these encounters with the living God.
In the Lutheran tradition it is foundational to say that we leave the ritual space transformed and renewed through liturgy. The Church does not bring about liturgy, but liturgy that brings about the Church. It is a communal act not an individual act. Christians do not worship because they believe nor do they believe because they worship at least in a sense that liturgy is a machine that will produce faith.
It is a presence that draws us to liturgy and a revelation experienced. Liturgy transforms the community into something they were not before the event began. It was a presence not faith that drew Moses to the burning bush. It was a presence not faith that drew the disciples to Jesus and revelation that they found. Since then we too have been drawn into assembly by the same presence. The assembly is transformed through liturgy becoming different from what they were before the act happened. Rituals give us a way to experience the Holy. Liturgy transforms us.
If we step foot in a new church we will notice a difference in rituals. Maybe they don’t process a cross before the service or have communion every Sunday. Often it is in these small ways that we experience a disruption in our worship. We may think, “Wait we don’t do it that way.” However, no matter what Christian church you worship with there are two things that are steadfast, communion and baptism. Sure we may do those rituals differently – some immerse, some sprinkle water – but the truth is we baptize.
The Eucharist and Baptism are liturgy at the core. The creeds, theories, text and prayers were formed to help worshipers understand baptism, not baptism being created to help understand the creeds and prayers. It was the community’s regular act of Eucharist and Baptism (liturgy) that brought about a theology to help understand and reflect on these encounters with the living God.
In the Lutheran tradition it is foundational to say that we leave the ritual space transformed and renewed through liturgy. The Church does not bring about liturgy, but liturgy that brings about the Church. It is a communal act not an individual act. Christians do not worship because they believe nor do they believe because they worship at least in a sense that liturgy is a machine that will produce faith.
It is a presence that draws us to liturgy and a revelation experienced. Liturgy transforms the community into something they were not before the event began. It was a presence not faith that drew Moses to the burning bush. It was a presence not faith that drew the disciples to Jesus and revelation that they found. Since then we too have been drawn into assembly by the same presence. The assembly is transformed through liturgy becoming different from what they were before the act happened. Rituals give us a way to experience the Holy. Liturgy transforms us.
Wednesday, October 14, 2009
Feet
Where have your feet taken you?
Look back on your life – think of all the places you’ve lived, worked, played, visited, cried, sang, danced… Where have your feet taken you?
This past week my feet took me to San Francisco, CA. It is a part of the country I had not seen, smelled, or experienced before. I got to breathe in the rich smell of the redwood forest, the creatively made wines and admittedly the stench of the sea lions. I got to see the beauty of the vineyards, redwoods, Pacific Ocean, and the hilly city.
Each of these new experiences made me realize how much I have yet to see in this world. I have traveled quite a bit in my life, but there is still so much more to experience. God created a world so rich how can we not want to experience it all?
It is easy to want to experience the world around us. Yet, it can be difficult for us to experience God. I mean how do we experience a supreme being – not of earthly laws – who loves us even when we don’t love. Who longs for our devotion when we’re busy worshiping the things God has created instead of God.
Our feet may take us many beautiful places here on earth. However, the most precious place they can take us is a little disturbing – it’s not a place we would expect. The most precious place is when our feet stand at the foot of the cross. It is in this unexpected place that we can experience God.
It is natural to expect a supreme being – not of earthly laws – to be sitting in that high glorious throne waving a judging gavel at us. Yet, at the foot of the cross we see a God who suffers so we don’t have to suffer. A God who is not high on a throne but a God who is willing to go to the most vulnerable of places so we can know how much we are loved.
Where have your feet taken you?
Look back on your life – think of all the places you’ve lived, worked, played, visited, cried, sang, danced… Where have your feet taken you?
This past week my feet took me to San Francisco, CA. It is a part of the country I had not seen, smelled, or experienced before. I got to breathe in the rich smell of the redwood forest, the creatively made wines and admittedly the stench of the sea lions. I got to see the beauty of the vineyards, redwoods, Pacific Ocean, and the hilly city.
Each of these new experiences made me realize how much I have yet to see in this world. I have traveled quite a bit in my life, but there is still so much more to experience. God created a world so rich how can we not want to experience it all?
It is easy to want to experience the world around us. Yet, it can be difficult for us to experience God. I mean how do we experience a supreme being – not of earthly laws – who loves us even when we don’t love. Who longs for our devotion when we’re busy worshiping the things God has created instead of God.
Our feet may take us many beautiful places here on earth. However, the most precious place they can take us is a little disturbing – it’s not a place we would expect. The most precious place is when our feet stand at the foot of the cross. It is in this unexpected place that we can experience God.
It is natural to expect a supreme being – not of earthly laws – to be sitting in that high glorious throne waving a judging gavel at us. Yet, at the foot of the cross we see a God who suffers so we don’t have to suffer. A God who is not high on a throne but a God who is willing to go to the most vulnerable of places so we can know how much we are loved.
Where have your feet taken you?
Wednesday, October 7, 2009
Selfishness and Seinfeld
By Johanna Johnson
[The man said], “I will pull down my barns and build larger ones, and there I will store all my grain and my goods. 19And I will say to my soul, Soul, you have ample goods laid up for many years; relax, eat, drink, be merry.” 20But God said to him, “You fool! This very night your life is being demanded of you. And the things you have prepared, whose will they be?” 21So it is with those who store up treasures for themselves but are not rich towards God.’ (Luke 12:18-21)
My family and I are big Seinfeld fans. For those of you who don’t know, Seinfeld is a show starring the comedian Jerry Seinfeld, and the premise of the show is: nothing. It is a show about nothing. But what it becomes is a show about four extremely selfish people trying to lead “normal” lives in New York City. Their constant concern only for themselves and their needs is comical, and gets them into ridiculous situations, which they attempt to solve with yet more selfish antics. It’s hilarious, because it reflects some of the worst qualities we see in people from day to day, qualities we hope we don’t have, or at least, that no one will see in us.
I think of Seinfeld when I read this text from Luke, about a man who rejoices in his abundance by selfishly hoarding it away. He could have fed the hungry with that surplus, or even invited people to his home for a party. At the very least, he could have thanked God for it – nowhere in the text is any thanksgiving offered, but rather, he pats himself on the back. In one episode of Seinfeld, one of the character’s parents realize that they have a fortune in the bank that they have never spent. So they buy a condo in Florida, where the cost of living is higher than Queens, NY, so they can burn through the money as quickly as possible. This is somewhat the opposite of the man from the story, in that rather than hoarding it away for no one to see, they flaunt the money by burning through it quickly. Their approach, however, is no less selfish.
What is the best way to respond to abundance? In Thanksgiving! And what is thanksgiving? I’d like to think of the word less as “thanksgiving,” and more as “thanks, giving.” Certainly, offering joyful thanks and praise to the God who provides is warranted. But let us not forget about the second part of the word – the “giving” part. God has blessed us in so many ways. What can you give? Surely from a God whose very identity is one of abundance, any given person has more gifts than one person can use alone. Hoarding them away doesn’t help anyone. Sow the seeds of God’s gifts so that they may grow and reach more abundance in more people. In the words of a song my mom sings with her kindergarten students, “Love is like a magic penny: hold it tight, you won’t have any. Lend it, spend it, you’ll have so many!”
[The man said], “I will pull down my barns and build larger ones, and there I will store all my grain and my goods. 19And I will say to my soul, Soul, you have ample goods laid up for many years; relax, eat, drink, be merry.” 20But God said to him, “You fool! This very night your life is being demanded of you. And the things you have prepared, whose will they be?” 21So it is with those who store up treasures for themselves but are not rich towards God.’ (Luke 12:18-21)
My family and I are big Seinfeld fans. For those of you who don’t know, Seinfeld is a show starring the comedian Jerry Seinfeld, and the premise of the show is: nothing. It is a show about nothing. But what it becomes is a show about four extremely selfish people trying to lead “normal” lives in New York City. Their constant concern only for themselves and their needs is comical, and gets them into ridiculous situations, which they attempt to solve with yet more selfish antics. It’s hilarious, because it reflects some of the worst qualities we see in people from day to day, qualities we hope we don’t have, or at least, that no one will see in us.
I think of Seinfeld when I read this text from Luke, about a man who rejoices in his abundance by selfishly hoarding it away. He could have fed the hungry with that surplus, or even invited people to his home for a party. At the very least, he could have thanked God for it – nowhere in the text is any thanksgiving offered, but rather, he pats himself on the back. In one episode of Seinfeld, one of the character’s parents realize that they have a fortune in the bank that they have never spent. So they buy a condo in Florida, where the cost of living is higher than Queens, NY, so they can burn through the money as quickly as possible. This is somewhat the opposite of the man from the story, in that rather than hoarding it away for no one to see, they flaunt the money by burning through it quickly. Their approach, however, is no less selfish.
What is the best way to respond to abundance? In Thanksgiving! And what is thanksgiving? I’d like to think of the word less as “thanksgiving,” and more as “thanks, giving.” Certainly, offering joyful thanks and praise to the God who provides is warranted. But let us not forget about the second part of the word – the “giving” part. God has blessed us in so many ways. What can you give? Surely from a God whose very identity is one of abundance, any given person has more gifts than one person can use alone. Hoarding them away doesn’t help anyone. Sow the seeds of God’s gifts so that they may grow and reach more abundance in more people. In the words of a song my mom sings with her kindergarten students, “Love is like a magic penny: hold it tight, you won’t have any. Lend it, spend it, you’ll have so many!”
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