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Clothed with Christ, We are One

If you’ve ever been to Jay Cook State Park, you’ve probably walked over the swinging bridge. It doesn’t swing as much as it used to, but when we stopped there last week, because of the recent rains, the river was exuberantly rushing and churning over big rocks and sending sprays of mist into the air. It was breath-taking. After crossing the bridge, I scrambled up on top of the big rocks on the other side until I stood by the side of the river before the falls. It was spectacular. I was completely happy just looking at God’s creation. But then I heard something – so I turned around and saw a man gesturing and calling to me. He was on top of another rock but because of all the noise of the water hurling itself against the rocks, I couldn’t hear what he was saying. Then he started making the image of a camera. “Oh,” I thought, “he wants me to take his picture.” So, I started making my way to him. But when I got close, I finally heard what he wanted to say. “Give me your camera – and let me take your picture where you are standing. It will be a great shot!”   

And so I gave him my phone – and he took my picture. And then I offered to take a picture of him. Now it was his turn to be surprised – he didn’t expect me to reciprocate. But he smiled – and called his boys over to him – and they gave me their phone so I could take their picture on the same spot. 

Ordinarily, this might have been the end of the story – but I was curious about him and asked him his name – it was Paul. And then we got into a great conversation which was only able to take place because Paul – much like Paul the Apostle – was not concerned about the differences that might have kept us apart -- such as Covid, or gender or heritage. My ancestors were northern European. I didn’t ask – but I’m guessing his came from Africa. Instead, he was interested in what we had in common – such as admiring God’s beautiful creation.

I don’t know if the Paul that I met was Christian, but this is the image of Christian community that the Apostle Paul is writing about to the Galatians. “There is no longer Jew or Greek, there is no longer slave or free, there is no longer male and female; for all of you are one in Christ Jesus.” Gal 3:23

Throughout much of the Hebrew Scriptures, what we call the “Old Testament,” the people of God, the Jewish people, maintained their faith and their identity by being a people set apart and ruled by the law. Paul’s word for the law is disciplinarian which can also be translated as teacher or babysitter. Remember how the class behaves when the teacher steps out of the room? Sometimes a disciplinarian, a teacher or a babysitter is needed. In the Hebrew Scriptures – and still today – the law functions to lead, teach and guide God’s people. It is a gift.

But Paul, a Jewish person himself and highly knowledgeable about the law, argues there is no longer a need for a disciplinarian – or a babysitter. Instead, since in baptism we are clothed with Christ, we are all one.

Unfortunately, Paul’s desire sometimes seems more aspirational than actual in our world today (and probably in Galatia too). Like the Galatians, we still make distinctions between people based on their heritage, economic status, gender, religion and politics, to name only a few of the categories that we put people into. In fact, some things in our world – such as some forms of media and politics -- seem to benefit and even thrive on sowing seeds of discord and division. As a result, it’s easy to get discouraged about how we can ever come together as one in Christ.

But what if we took another look at what it might mean for us to be “clothed with Christ” and to be “one” in Christ.

First of all, when Paul says we are “clothed in Christ,” he wasn’t assuming that we would put on Christ like a robe when we come into church and then discard it on the way out. We can’t just “put on” Christ like a new pair of shoes. Instead, Paul is expecting us to walk in those shoes every day until those shoes feel as if they are a part of our feet. This might mean that we feel the pinch of those shoes if we are not walking in the way of Jesus. But it will also mean that our feet will be protected and supported. Paul is not just wanting us to look good – he is looking for transformation to happen both in the way that we think and in the way that we act.

However, being “one” in Christ does not mean that we will all be exactly the same.  God’s creation is made up of diversity – and mutual dependance of one being upon another. The same is true about the gifts and talents of people. We need teachers and plumbers, farmers and engineers, artists and construction workers. I get energy from talking with people and engaging with them while other people would rather work alone on a physical project and still others would prefer to be in a group, like a choir.  It is clear that we need a variety of gifts and talents as part of the body of Christ but it is also true that we can be one in Christ even if our theology is different.

Two weeks ago, on Pentecost Sunday, when our church Council and Faith Practices Neighboring Practices team invited the leadership of Greater St. John’s Missionary Baptist church to share a meal and conversation with us, we did not know how it would go. Would we be able to have meaningful conversations or would we end up in sharing food but not ourselves? 

I am happy to report that the Holy Spirit is alive and well and was active in our conversation. We shared openly and honestly about the problems and challenges in the world, our community and our families.  I’m sure we don’t agree on everything but then even within our church we don’t agree on everything. But it was amazing at how much we found in common with one another simply by praying together, talking with one another and trusting the Holy Spirit who celebrates our diversity and yet makes us one in Christ Jesus. We also agreed that we want to do this again – and we want you all to be a part of the conversation.

 Brothers and sisters, siblings in Christ, we are one in Christ because the Holy Spirit works in us and through us. Much like the law – the disciplinarian, teacher and babysitter of the Hebrew Scriptures, the Holy Spirit is there to encourage, teach, comfort and challenge us. For just like a new pair of shoes needs to be worn in order to stretch, we need to continue to pray and to talk and to invite the Holy Spirit to transform us to be one in Christ. Thanks be to God.

Faith-Lilac Way Lutheran Church     June 19, 2022       Pastor Pam Stalheim Lane

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Sunday Sermon

There is not any human language that adequately describes how the love within the Trinity is the source of God’s love for the whole world.  We know that God’s love is clearly present everywhere but the source of that love and how it spreads to all the people of the world is a mystery that we will likely never solve.  When I think about the mystery of love, I think back to the hit song The Power of Love by Huey Lewis and the News.  The song The Power of Love was featured in the movie Back to the Future.  Some of you may remember Back to the Future.  The movie starts in the 1980s which was the time when I was growing up and most of the action occurs in the 1950s before the main character Marty McFly returns back to 1985 at the end of the movie.  I will give you a spoiler here and tell you that love is what drives the action in the film.  Marty McFly must make sure that his parents fall in love and he realizes that if they do not fall in love in 1955 then he has no future in 1985.  It appears unlikely that Marty’s parents will fall in love but they do.  Love is something that just cannot be explained and this is reflected in the opening lyric of the song The Power of Love which is “The power of love is a curious thing.”  Later in the song is the line “But it might just save your life.”  Yes, we cannot explain love and we do not understand it.  However, this thing that we cannot explain actually saves our lives and makes them worth living. 

In my first semester of seminary, I learned the fancy word perichoresis.   Perichoresis is the theological term that describes the mutual indwelling of the three persons of the Trinity.  It has been described as an eternal dance of fellowship between the members of the Trinity.  Perichoresis is derived from the Greek words peri which means “around” and choreo which is “to go” or “come”.  God the Creator, Jesus the Savior, and the sustaining Holy Spirit are three individual persons but they are one in being and they dwell in each other and share an intimate friendship and this deep relationship and love between the three persons of the Trinity then manifests itself in our daily lives as the love that God has for the world.  The love between the persons of the Trinity is constantly flowing and so it may best represented by a circle similar to the circle that appears on the cover of today’s worship folder.  However, the love of the Trinity does not just remain in the circle of the Trinity but it spills out and spreads out all over the entire world.  As theologians we can spend a significant amount of time trying to analyze the intricacies of perichoresis.  Ultimately perichoresis cannot be adequately explained in human language as there are not words which can describe how the love within the Trinity is the source of God’s love for the whole world. 

Love is often expressed in relationships therefore looking at relationships may give us some insight into Trinitarian love.  God seeks to be in relationship with each and every one of us so the idea of perichoresis makes sense because if God is a God of relationships then relationships exist within the Godhead itself.  Relationships are the basis of our lives.  Yes, there are some hermits out there who live in isolation but even they live in relationship with the flora and fauna of God’s creation.  The reality is that humans are meant to live in community with each other.  God appears to us in relationships.  We see God in our families and in our community.  We are all created in the image of God and we see God in the face of our neighbors.  God is there in the work of healthcare professionals who heal and save lives.  God is there in the work of our teachers who are preparing our youth for future success.  God is there in the crying of the new born child who is just happy to have a chance at life despite being unaware of the challenges that face humanity.  Because God desires to be in relationship with all of God’s children we are invited into loving relationship with God.  God brings us into the circle of the Trinity and then never leaves us.  We are drawn into the loving circle of God and then this loving circle of God goes with us as we head out into the world each day.  The love of God dwells in us and we take the love of God to others through our relationships.    

Because we see God in people it is easy to become confused about the persons of the Trinity.  The Trinity is not a committee of three separate people.  According to the theologian Marcus Borg the early church fathers would have viewed the Trinity as one God who is known to us and speaks to us in three primary roles in which we experience God’s presence and God’s love.  God speaks to us in the Hebrew scriptures as the creator of the world and the God of Israel.  God is also known to Christians as Jesus Christ the Savior of the world.  Finally, God is also made known in the activity of the Holy Spirit.[1]  There are three different manifestations of the same God acting in the world so that we may experience God’s steadfast love.   

The idea of experiencing God through relationships would have been familiar to the disciples who were the original audience for today’s gospel text.  Through Scripture they were familiar with the God who delivered Israel from Egypt and who freely offered the people of Israel steadfast love and faithfulness despite their rebellion.  The disciples had experienced God incarnate as they witnessed first hand the miracles and the teaching that Jesus did in the name of God.  Now they are being introduced to the third manifestation of God.  Jesus makes it clear that the Spirit will always be with them.  Even though Jesus is leaving them the disciples will never be alone.  Jesus’ ongoing presence with the disciples will be made known to them through the coming Spirit who will guide them and lead them to see God in their neighbors.  The Spirit allows the disciples to show God’s love and bring hope to their community.  The Spirit will enable them to feed the hungry, heal the sick, and lift up the oppressed.  Even though the idea of the Trinity is difficult to comprehend it would have been clear to these disciples as they were continuing the ministry of Jesus that this Spirit that was with them and leading them was of the same character as the God of Israel whom they knew through Scripture and Jesus the Christ with whom they had traveled.  Because the members of the Trinity are fully in relationship with each other we are also able to experience God through relationships just as the disciples did.    

For my parents’ fiftieth wedding anniversary last summer we decided to give them a Storyworth account for one year.  Storyworth sends each of my parents a question each week and the questions can be kind of random and one week my dad was asked how he experienced Neil Armstrong’s moon landing.  My parents actually had their first date on July 19, 1969 and the moon landing happened the next evening July 20, 1969.  My father has always loved science fiction and the moon landing was actually the real thing.  My mother was working at the Tastee Freeze that night and rather than staying home and watching the moon landing on tv my dad went up to the Tastee Freeze to see my mom.  As my dad recalled in his story, he watched the moon landing on a small portable tv with the staff and customers who were there.  It is amazing when you think about all the random things that could have derailed any one of us from being here.  I think of Back to the Future and Marty McFly who successfully convinced his dad George not to stay home and watch the Saturday night science fiction show but instead to go to the school dance and stand up to the bully Biff Tannen and kiss Marty’s mom for the first time.  If my dad had watched the moon landing at home it is possible that I might not be here.  Fortunately for me I am the product of a beautiful loving relationship that started in the summer of 1969.  Ultimately all of us have been given the gift of life because of the loving relationship of the Trinity.  In the love of the Trinity God gives us the relationships which make our lives possible and enjoyable and it is this love that we feel as God accompanies us on our journey through life.

As Huey Lewis and the News told us the power of love is a curious thing.  We cannot explain why God loves us so much that God created us.  The doctrine of the Trinity is an attempt at explaining the unconditional love of God but like any human endeavor the Trinity can only explain so much and it does not completely reveal the mystery of God’s love.  The good news is that the love of God shared between Creator, Son, and Spirit is freely available and shared with each and every one of us in our relationship with God and in our relationships with each other.  We may not be able to explain it but it is clear that the love of God is present with us and saving us whether God’s love appears in the goodness of creation, on the cross at Calvary, or in our families and communities.  Yes, in the Trinity you feel the power of love.  

-         Vicar Kyle Anderson

[1] Marcus J. Borg, Speaking Christian: Why Christian Words Have Lost Their Meaning and Power – And How They Can Be Restored, (New York: Harper Collins, 2011), 214.

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PENTECOST – The Holy Spirit and You 

Today is Pentecost – the day we celebrate the Holy Spirit.

As Lutherans, we tend to focus more often on God the Father and Creator and on Jesus our Savior and Redeemer. Even in the Apostles creed, the Holy Spirit, the third person of the Trinity barely gets a mention. Perhaps this is because the Holy Spirit, the gift of Jesus to us, is harder to define and understand – in part because the Holy Spirit routinely colors outside the lines and is not bound by tradition or any rules that we may try to impose upon the Spirit. But just because we can’t understand the Holy Spirit doesn’t mean that we should ignore the Spirit or the role the Holy Spirit plays in our lives.  As Martin Luther recognized in his Small Catechism, the Holy Spirit is essential for our life of faith. The Holy Spirit has always been around.

The Holy Spirit was present in the beginning of creation as it moved over the waters. And the Holy Spirit was with the Israelites as they traveled across the desert to the Holy Land. And, as we heard in the Acts of the Apostles reading, sometimes the Holy Spirit shows up with powerful winds and flames of fire. No one was expecting that - but suddenly everyone hears the story of Jesus in their own language. and proclaims with joy and jubilation that Jesus is Lord.  Because the Holy Spirit cannot be contained or controlled, the Holy Spirit comes in ways that we don’t expect.

However, there is one place that Jesus promised that the Holy Spirit would be – and that is in the water and the Word of God when we are baptized in Christ’s name. At this time, we receive the gift of the Holy Spirit. You are “sealed with the Holy Spirit” -- and the Holy Spirit never leaves you. So, while we cannot understand the Holy Spirit, we know that we can count on the Holy Spirit to be present in our lives. 

So what does the Holy Spirit do? In baptism, the Holy Spirit calls and claims us as children of God.

Soon we will be baptizing Rosalyn Ramona… just as her parents Joey and Courtney were baptized and just their parents, and grandparents and great grandparents were baptized. In baptism, we receive the gift of the Holy Spirit, a gift which has been given since Jesus told his disciples to baptize in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit. This gift of the Holy Spirit has been and continues to be given freely– and it is given for you too -- no matter who you are. Through the power of the Holy Spirit, each person is named and claimed, individually, as a child of God sealed by the Holy Spirit and marked with the cross of Christ forever. You are claimed as God’s child and God wants a relationship with each one of you.

I remember the first night that I was home with my first child. I was very nervous because – I was a sound sleeper. And I was afraid that I would not wake up when my baby cried. But you already know what happened, don’t you. Of course, the moment that he cried, I was not only up and awake but at his side. You know the cry of your baby. Or when you go to a crowded playground and a child cries out, “Mama,” or “Daddy” – lots of heads go up – but one person is running to that child.

That is the kind of relationship that God has with each of God’s beloved children. The apostle Paul urges us to call upon God as “Abba! Father!” just as Jesus did. For like Jesus, you are a child of God and God loves you and cares for you. Every day.

The Holy Spirit nurtures you in your relationship with God. And that is one of the reasons we gather in worship together. The Holy Spirit is present with us and supports us in our faith whenever two or more are gathered in the name of Christ. We do that in the church, at Bible camps, on mission trips and whenever we gather together.

The Holy Spirit also nurtures us in our daily life through our prayers, scripture reading and our devotions. Many of you do this already. But for those of you who do not, I encourage you to find simple ways to do that. For example, pray a prayer of thanks before you eat, a prayer of gratitude when you go to bed, a prayer asking for HELP any time of the day. The Holy Spirit hears your prayer. 

I also encourage you, Joey and Courtney, to make the sign of the cross on Rosy’s forehead every time you give her a bath, reminding her that she is a child of God. This works for everyone actually – whether you are at the sink, the tub or the shower. Make the sign of the cross on your forehead and say, “I am a child of God. God loves me.”

Finally, one more habit. The Holy Spirit speaks to us through the Scriptures, and so I encourage a daily habit of reading – even just a verse a day. Today there are so many options – little booklets but also devotions that will pop up in your email or on your phone. These are ways for you to welcome and engage with the Holy Spirit in your daily life.

The Holy Spirit also calls us to care for others who are hurting. Because the Holy Spirit calls us into relationship with Christ, when we suffer, Jesus Christ suffers and we do not feel alone. But, as it says in Romans, because we are in relationship with Christ, when Christ suffers, we too are called to “suffer with him.” 

But where, you may ask, is Christ suffering? Christ is suffering with those who are hurting.

 Christ is suffering with the people in Tulsa, Oklahoma where people died of gun violence at a medical center. And Christ is suffering with the people in Buffalo, New York who lost loved ones at a grocery store because of the color of their skin. And, Christ is grieving with the parents in Evolde, Texas after their children were killed while they were at school. These are not the only things for which Christ grieves. For wherever God’s children suffer… Christ suffers too and so do we.

So what do we do with a world that is so broken, that has such evil in it? Sometimes our world can feel overwhelming. But we can call upon God as Abba, Father, and ask Jesus to send the Holy Spirit to help us, lead us and transform our weary world.

And God hears our cry. And the Holy Spirit helps us to respond with prayers, with tears, … and with humble, loving, transforming actions.

I saw this happen during the pandemic when loved ones were stuck in nursing homes and care facilities. Some of you sent cards, others called on the phone, we delivered worship materials and some of you found creative ways to connect. For example, one day as I was visiting Ramona Anderson, Rosalyn’s great, great grandma, she told me that Joey and Kait had just visited her through the window. What joy that simple action made for her! The Holy Spirit is at work through you whenever you care for another child of God.

For this is what the Holy Spirit does –  the Holy Spirit shows us that God’s love is bigger than we can ever imagine – and that God loves you.  No matter what. Even when we make mistakes. Even when we hurt one another. Even when we feel as if the world is beyond repair. The Holy Spirit is there to forgive us and lead and guide us back into right relationship with God and with our neighbor. This is the work of the Spirit. Thanks be to God. Amen.

June 5, 2022          Faith-Lilac Way    Pastor Pam Stalheim Lane

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Sunday Sermon

I graduated from high school on this day thirty years ago.  Graduations are times of transition as one chapter of life ends and another begins.  One unique thing about my high school graduation day is that I did not spend one minute of it in my home.  I woke up that morning on the campus of Eastern Illinois University which is the site of the Illinois High School Association state track finals.  Our team was one of many teams that stayed in the dormitories at the university.  My race was not until the second day of the meet so on the first day I was watching the competition and supporting my teammates.  Late in the afternoon a coach and the graduating seniors made the nearly two-hour trip back to our school in a van.  We arrived at the school about an hour before the graduation ceremony which gave us a chance to shower and change into our graduation regalia.  We then participated in the graduation ceremony and afterward we were allowed to have a few moments with friends and family before we were in the van to head back to the track meet.  We returned around midnight and I did not sleep well at all as I was still feeling the emotions of graduation and being nervous about my race the next day.  I ran my race and I did not do as well as I wanted.  I ran much slower than my qualifying time but as I left the track my disappointment was tempered somewhat by the fact that I had actually made it to the state finals after many years of disciplined running.  We returned home after the track meet and the next day was a Sunday and my parents hosted a graduation party in my honor.  It was a memorable afternoon spent with family and friends.  To this day I appreciate how loved and supported I am by friends and family.  I received numerous gifts and one of those gifts was a five-dollar laundry basket from Wal-Mart that is still in use today in my apartment.  The day after the party I showed up to work at Hardee’s fast-food restaurant which is where I would be employed until leaving for college at the end of the summer.  Despite my academic and athletic accomplishments which had just been celebrated I was starting at the bottom just like anyone else.  The only status that I had was that since I was eighteen, I was allowed to operate the beef slicer to make the roast beef sandwiches.

When I think back to that four-day period of thirty years ago it is very obvious that it was a time of transition.  I look back fondly at those days and I think about the lessons that I learned and how they shaped me into the person that I am today.  In the Ascension story it is obvious that the disciples are also at a transition point.  Jesus has risen from the dead which is good news however it is quite clear in this text that things were not going to return to how they were before.  When Jesus appeared on Easter evening the disciples originally thought that he was a ghost.  Today’s Gospel passage starts with Jesus telling the disciples that “These are my words that I spoke to you while I was still with you.”  Jesus was definitely there and he had just eaten a piece of broiled fish so the disciples were probably somewhat confused that Jesus spoke to them as if he were already gone.  It is clear that the pre-Easter Jesus has not returned and that the nature of the relationship that the disciples will now have with Jesus is going to be quite different than what it was before.

Like any good educator Jesus gives the disciples the tools that they will need as they enter a rapidly changing world.  Being well prepared for the future means being prepared to deal with change because change is inevitable.  Our jobs do not stay the same as technology advances and economies are restructured.  Our relationships are often in flux as cherished loved ones pass on and new generations come into being.  We move into new homes and even if we stay in the same residence for many years, we see that our neighbors seem to be constantly moving in and out of the neighborhood.  Jesus prepares the disciples for the reality of a changing world by teaching them to turn to the scriptures for guidance.  Just as he did when he taught the travelers on the road to Emmaus Jesus makes it clear that he came not to abolish the law and the prophets but that he is the fulfillment of the scriptures.  In the law, the prophets, and the psalms of the Hebrew scriptures God promises faithful love to God’s people as well as justice and freedom for the oppressed.  We have the gift of scripture which is a resource to which we can always turn and in scripture we see that we worship a God who loves us so much that this God is present with us and shares our suffering as part of the work of saving the world.

Jesus is present not only in scripture but he is present everywhere.  Without the Ascension it is very possible that we would not be here today worshiping God.  In the ancient Middle East, each nation had a god and that god was generally thought to rule over a specific territory.  With the Ascension it is now clear that God is not limited to any one time or place.  The pre-Easter Jesus did many great miracles but even when he was walking on water, healing the sick, and feeding five thousand people Jesus appeared in one particular place at one particular time just like any human being.  After the Ascension Jesus is everywhere and Jesus can be experienced and known at any time and in any place.  Jesus is clear that he is the Lord of the entire world as he tells the disciples that they are to proclaim repentance and forgiveness of sins to all nations.  It is not only members of the nation of Israel but it is each and every nation all over the world that has the opportunity to experience the Risen Jesus.  The promise of God has always included repentance and forgiveness of sins.  When the Israelites rebelled against God the invitation to return to the Lord was always present.  Now these promises that were made to Israel are made to all of God’s children throughout the world.

After graduation the class scatters and everyone goes their separate ways.  Everyone takes the lessons that they learned with them to a new situation.  In some ways it is sad but moving on is inevitable and it is the only way that growth can occur.  The good news about Jesus spread because the apostles possessing what they learned from Jesus proclaimed to other nations the gifts of repentance and forgiveness.  The Kingdom of God grows through divine intervention but it is not a singular cosmic event like the Ascension that spreads the gospel but it is God working through individuals who share their experience of Christ’s love that allows people to experience the salvation promised to us in Jesus.

The Ascension story ends with Jesus blessing the disciples before being carried up into heaven.  The timing of this has always intrigued me.  Biblical scholars are certain of the common authorship of Luke and Acts.  In Acts we read that Jesus appeared over forty days between Resurrection and Ascension.  However, in Luke there is no mention of a time gap so it appears to me that on Easter night Jesus and the disciples made the two mile walk to Bethany where Jesus ascended into heaven.  There is no need to reconcile this discrepancy even though I am partial to the idea that on that first Easter Day everything happened including the empty tomb, the Resurrection appearances, and the Ascension.  I personally view the Crucifixion, Resurrection, and Ascension as one saving act that occurred in a three-day period.  In the end it does not matter whether the Ascension happened on Easter evening or forty days later.  Just as none of us remember the specifics of the algebra equations we solved or the essays that we wrote, we know that what matters is that we were prepared by our teachers to enter the world just as Jesus the Great Teacher prepared the disciples for the world that they would now face. 

Jesus blessed the disciples and after the Ascension the disciples continually worshiped God and blessed God in the temple.  I love that the Gospel of Luke ends in this way.  We have been blessed by God and saved by our Lord Jesus Christ.  Because we are blessed, we have the opportunity to share our blessings with others.  The things that we learned in school did not seem to have much meaning at the time.  However, the basic skills that we learned in school have the ability to change the world.  No matter what your job is the fundamentals like the basic math and communication skills that you learned allow you to accomplish your work in the world which brings meaning and purpose to you and to others.  The basics that we learned in school allow us to bring blessings to others as we all contribute to making our society function and hopefully make the world just a little bit better each day.

In the Ascension Jesus prepares not only his disciples but also those of us alive today to face the reality of life in a changing world.  Jesus is not only present in scripture but Jesus also fulfills scripture.  Jesus is not limited to one time and place but Jesus goes with us wherever we go which allows us to take the Gospel to new places.  The ability to take the Gospel to new places is a blessing and is possible only because we are blessed by God.  Whether you are graduating this year or you graduated thirty years ago or sixty years ago be assured that God is always with you and has prepared you for discipleship.

-         Vicar Kyle Anderson

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Music is Our Response to God

Martin Luther once said, “Next to the Word of God, music deserves the highest praise. The gift of language combined with the gift of song was given to us that we should proclaim the Word of God through Music.” 1

And so today, we give thanks for the gift of music – and for the musicians that create it – and help us to sing too.

Although it may look effortless from the point of view of the pew, creating beautiful music may be fun but it isn’t automatic or easy. Instead, it’s like the young musician who said to the New York cab driver, “How do I get to Carnegie Hall?” The driver looked at earnest young student, smiled and said, “practice, practice, practice!” 

Creating beautiful music takes practice. I know from personal experience. I’ve also listened while Anne and Ann Marie have gone over notes with the choir. Some of those rhythms and harmonies aren’t obvious or easy. And, when Anne had the elementary students singing in Choristers, her patience routinely amazed me. She would encourage them to sing a little higher, listen more and despite the fact that clearly, singing wasn’t the greatest gift of every student, she never gave up on them. Instead, she instilled a love of music in them and a confidence that they could sing – and that God would be glorified.  

As I was preparing for today, I was reminded of a prayer that I prayed as a young musician – and maybe some of you have prayed or sung it too. It’s called “The Chorister’s Prayer.” It goes like this: “Bless, O Lord, us thy servants, who minister in thy temple. Grant that what we sing with our lips, we may believe in our hearts, and what we believe in our hearts, we may show forth in our lives. Through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.2

This is a very old prayer – some trace versions of it as far back as the 13th or 14th century. But what I love about it is that it speaks to a beautiful and timeless yearning to do more than sing beautiful words about God – even though the words themselves are often very meaningful and the music that carries them may be stirring or catchy or memorable. I know I’m going to be singing “This Little Light of Mine” all week long!  But the prayer goes even beyond the goal of leading the congregation and all those who hear in praise and adoration of God. The prayer is that in the act singing, the singer will be transformed in their hearts, minds and in the way they lead their lives.

Music can do this – and not just for the choir. Music has a way of getting under our skin. It finds pathways to the heart and to our lives where knowledge and reason cannot go.  But it isn’t just the music.  This is the work of the Holy Spirit. For like music, the Holy Spirit can go places and create hope into places that seem impossible.

As Jesus told the disciples in our Gospel, they did not need to fear – even though the world was looking pretty bleak. Remember, the ruling powers of both Rome and the church were conspiring against them and Jesus has told them that he is going away.  But Jesus told them not to fear because he was sending the Holy Spirit, the Advocate, to be with them.

The Holy Spirit – like music – comes with a breath, a wind – and it has the power to change, to transform what has been before. This was true in the days of the early church and this remains true today.  We don’t always understand how God can work for good in the midst of the mess of a world that we live in, the chaos and disfunction that we see. And yet… God hears our prayers. God hears your prayers.

And so, I invite you to join me in praying the Chorister’s prayer, and in making it your prayer. Let us pray:

Dear Lord, “Grant that what we sing with our lips, we may believe In our hearts, and what we believe in our hearts, we may show forth in our lives. Through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.”

1Martin Luther as quoted https://www.gethsemane-elca.org/worship-music]

2Chorister’s Prayer https://www.rscm.org.uk/our-resources/liturgy-worship/choristers-prayer/

May 22, 2022            Faith-Lilac Way Lutheran Church            Pastor Pam Stalheim Lane

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Sunday Sermon

It is very important to follow any story to its final conclusion.  It is often not until the end of the story that we are able to put into proper context the things that occur earlier in the narrative.  I remember several years ago when Dan Brown’s books were all the rage and the source of some controversy.  The Da Vinci Code had just been made into a movie so I decided to read Angels and Demons which was the book that preceded the Da Vinci Code.  I remember reading about five hundred pages of Angels and Demons and I thought that it was a nice tour through Rome and featured some interesting history but it did not seem controversial.  I remember telling my wife that I did not understand why this book made people so upset.  She gave me this weird look and told me that we should talk again after I read the last one hundred pages.  I then proceeded to finish the book and the action obviously picked up as crazy things happened all the way to the end.  I remember that the views that I had of several characters changed in light of how the book ended.  I do not want to give you a spoiler but in particular there was one character who seemed like a pretty good guy who in the end was the most sinister character in the whole book.  By reading to the end, I was finally able to see why the book was so controversial and the ending caused me to reinterpret the earlier parts of the story.

The Book of Revelation is a text that needs to be read fully and completely to the end.  Revelation is a book of the Bible that is often referenced in popular culture.  When I hear a prediction or a proclamation based on Revelation, I tend to be pretty skeptical because it is often clear to me that the person has not read the story all the way to the end.  The chaos unleashed by the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, fierce battles fought by great armies, and the rapture of fortunate souls to heaven are some images of the end times that appear in popular culture.  However, if one reads to the end of the story, we have nothing of which to be afraid.  At the end of time God is not planning to subject the earth to devastation or destruction.  God is not planning on leaving any unfortunate souls behind.  The Book of Revelation comes to its conclusion with the holy city descending from heaven, God dwelling with us, and God renewing all of creation as all will drink from the spring of the water of life.  Do not be deceived.  Revelation actually concludes with a happy ending.

Just because the story of God as told in Revelation ends well does not mean that we can simply ignore the turmoil described in the book.  God is fighting a battle against Satan each and every day.  We are assured of God’s victory in the Resurrection of Jesus Christ, but that does not mean that the struggle of daily life is not real.  It is easy to despair as we see the pictures from the war in Ukraine and we cannot avoid seeing the terrible and real suffering that the people there are experiencing.  The impacts of this war are now starting to be felt everywhere.  People in neighboring countries now live in fear of Russian aggression.  People in countries which are food insecure will starve as Ukrainian grain exports are expected to sharply decrease.  Even in a relatively safe and wealthy country like the United States we see that sending weapons to arm the Ukrainians takes away money that could be devoted to social programs or to our crumbling infrastructure.  In addition to the war, we still have COVID-19 in our midst as the threat level has ticked up to yellow and something that did not exist two and a half years ago is now the third leading cause of death in the United States.  It is only May but the upcoming election season is a further reminder that many of those seeking political offices are more interested in their own self-interest than they are in serving the common good.  Yes, it is a bit depressing when you realize that human progress is not always a straight line to a better life for all of humanity but that history is often circular and involves us moving through cycles of good times and bad times.  Every day we live in the midst of the transition from the first heaven and earth to the new heaven and earth and we experience how painful this transition can be.  Yes, the times are difficult but this image of the new Jerusalem coming down out of heaven symbolizes that God is present with us during this time of transition just as God was present with the people of Israel in the wilderness, the exiles in Babylon, and the apostles who faced persecution.              

Dreams are a powerful way for people to maintain hope during difficult times.  As an example of apocalyptic literature Revelation is not merely a prediction of events to come but it is a revealing of God’s dream to us.  Many great theologians throughout history have boldly proclaimed their dreams.  The holy city in Revelation is an allusion to an earlier vision in the Hebrew Scriptures as the prophet Isaiah writes about a new heaven and a new earth as a time when there will be peace, justice, and prosperity.  In his classic The City of God Augustine writes of the new Jerusalem as being the place where the eternal truths of God are fully revealed.  In more modern times we have the dream of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. who spoke of a beloved community of economic and social justice in which all members are equal and are treated with dignity.  Throughout the generations the vision of the holy city in Revelation has always promised life, healing, reconciliation and justice.  In this dream we see what is important to God.  We see that God is not distant but instead desires to be with us as God wipes away our tears and offers us eternal life through the miracle of Resurrection.  Our God is a God who meets all of our spiritual and material needs.  Nobody is left thirsty as everyone is invited to drink from the water of life.  If we read all the way to the end of the story, we see that God’s vision of the future is not one of exclusion, death, and scarcity but that the new heaven and the new earth are part of a vision of inclusion, life, and abundance.

This vision of Revelation is not just a description of what God is doing but it is also an invitation for us to participate in God’s dream.  We are not taken away from this world to escape it but rather we are invited to enter into deeper relationships in our community.  In my view this vision of a new Jerusalem coming down out of heaven is so powerful because humans live in community with each other and through our relationships we support each other and improve the quality of each other’s lives.  We do not flee from our broken world but Jesus who is present in our midst works through us to build a more authentic community and society.

I am really glad that the actual ending of Revelation does not involve a glorious rapture into heaven.  I am not inspired by a God who simply whisks away the good people to heaven while leaving the rest of us behind to fend for ourselves.  A God that calls us into partnership and provides us with the opportunities that allow the love of Jesus to be experienced in this world is a God that inspires my trust and belief.  As I mentioned earlier Revelation is not merely a prediction of the future but it is a revealing of God’s promises.  It is clear in this vision that God is the divine actor who is bringing the new Jerusalem into being.  However, the renewing of creation and the coming of the holy city is not in my view a singular cosmic event.  I believe that God is present and inviting us to help create the holy city.  It is not solely human initiative but it is God working through humans which brings about the renewal of creation.  I recently heard a news story about a real estate developer in Ukraine who goes to the supermarket in Dnipro each day and buys baby formula and diapers which she then gives away for free to individuals and to mutual aid organizations.  On the visit featured in the news report she spent $750.  According to the reporter she goes virtually every day and she has spent thousands of dollars during the war.  As this woman proves it is possible in the midst of death to save lives.  During these turbulent times we may not always recognize it but the renewal of creation is occurring as God is working through us to make it happen.  

Read the story carefully and read it all the way to the end.  Yes, there are many twists and turns in the plot, however the vision presented in the Book of Revelation is not something that should scare us but rather it is something that we are invited to embrace.  When we read the story of God’s love in the Bible all the way to the very end, we see that God’s love is even more powerful and closer to us than what our limited minds can imagine.  Even in these turbulent and trying times we are comforted by the reality that God has a dream and that dream involves each and every one of us living in close relationship to God and to each other.  God continues to create new life in the midst of death and God invites every single one of us into God’s dream.

~ Vicar Kyle Anderson

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I Am So Grateful…  

What do you think of when you hear the word shepherd? Do you think of the Renaissance pastoral paintings of a shepherd playing his harp for the sheep? Or children dressed up in bathrobes and headpieces to tell the Christmas story?

But that is not what those who were gathered around Jesus would have heard when he said, “I am the Good Shepherd.” They would have been reminded of the shepherd David who became king and the prophies of a Shepherd/King to come. They would have heard the 23rd Psalm: “The Lord is my Shepherd.”

The Lord is my shepherd. When we, as people of faith, read or recite these words, we are making a personal confession. You and I are each saying, “The Lord is my shepherd.” The Psalm walks us through the ways the Lord shepherds us and ends with the proclamation, again personal, “I will dwell in the house of the Lord forever.”

Rev. Dr. Rolf Jacobson, a Hebrew scholar at Luther Seminary, said that, in the Hebrew, the words translated, “I will dwell” means “I will return and stay.”1 This is a statement of faith, trusting that it is the Lord who provides for each of us, walks with us– even through the deepest valley, honors us, forgives us, and pursues us with grace and mercy. This is what our Lord God has done for us.  How can we respond?

When you were growing up and you received a gift, your mother or someone in a mother or father role, probably told you: “Be sure you say: thank you.” Not only was it the right thing to do, saying thank you expresses gratitude.

About twenty years ago or so, neuroscientists started studying gratitude. They discovered when people express or receive gratitude, our brain releases dopamine and serotonin. And, we feel better. We feel joyful!.

Researcher Brené Brown wanted to discover the relationship between joy and gratitude. What she found, surprised her. Everyone she interviewed who was joyful, actively practiced gratitude. And, she said, it wasn’t just ‘attitude of gratitude,’ because she found that “attitude doesn’t always translate to action.”3 Instead, she found that the practice of gratitude is what made people joyful.”

So how does one “practice” gratitude? Brene Brown found that it could be writing in a gratitude journal or simply saying these four words out loud, “I am so grateful …” and then filling in the blank – and doing that every day. For herself, she said that she and her family, after saying grace at dinner, say one thing for which they are grateful. She says it has made a huge difference in their family life.

So what can be our response to Jesus, our Good Shepherd who has been revealed in the Psalm as one who provides for each one of us, cares for each one, and is with each one of us?  Today I would like to invite you to practice gratitude with me.

If you can, take a piece of paper or a post-it note and write: I am grateful for… and then write either Jesus for being your Good Shepherd, or God your creator or the Holy Spirit who walks beside you. That’s your first practice of gratitude: being grateful to God.

We are grateful that Jesus is our Good Shepherd. But we can also be grateful for the way God has provided for us. As Psalm says, “I shall not BE in want.” Like the shepherd who provides green pastures and still waters for the sheep, God provides food and drink for you too – and in abundance.

So   I invite you to write, “I am grateful for… “ and then write down one of your favorite foods or beverages. What marvelous food do you love to eat? Strawberries might be mine.  What do you love to drink? Water? wine ? coffee? Coke?

This is just the beginning of the gifts of God for which we can express our gratitude. Now I want you to think of a person, who is living, for whom you are grateful. Brene Brown says that in her family, on birthdays, everyone shares one gratitude for the birthday person.3 So think of someone, even better if it is someone that you will see today or will mail a card to today, and write, I am grateful for… and then fill in their name and one short reason why you are grateful for them. I invite you to give or send your post-it to that person later today.

Isn’t this fun?! There is so much for which we can be grateful. This is enough to make me joyful. And that’s another surprising thing that Brené Brown discovered: being joyful doesn’t make us grateful. It’s actually the other way around. As the Anglican brother David Steindl-Rast once said, “The root of joy is gratefulness...It is not joy that makes us grateful; it is gratitude that makes us joyful.”5 This is important for us to know because every day, every situation, is not joy-filled. We live in a world that is often troubled.

Psalm 23 speaks to that reality. We read that God provides protection and honor – a banquet table -- even in the midst of enemies.

Because we have enjoyed living in relative peace for so many years, I never thought much about what it would mean to be at a banquet in the midst of enemies. But now, with all of the fighting in the Ukraine… the word “enemy” doesn’t sound so strange anymore. My heart goes out to the Ukrainians and Russians who have family on both sides of the conflict. And, in our own country, within our community and even in families, divisiveness over so many issues can be sharp – and painful. But the question is the same – whether it is a personal or an international conflict: how do we live with gratitude in the midst of challenging times and places?

In her book, The Hiding Place, Cori ten Boom and her sister Betsy are sent to a concentration camp after hiding Jewish people from the Nazis. Their barracks was filthy and swarmed with fleas, and she wondered how they could possibly live in this place. But then she heard her sister Betsy praying in gratitude and giving thanks – for their Bible, for their fellow prisoners and … for the fleas.  At this, Cori objected, saying, “Betsie, there’s no way even God can make me grateful for a flea.” And yet, they discovered that because their barracks was filled with fleas, the guards did not come into their barracks to harass or hurt them. And so… Cori joined her sister in praying with thanks and gratitude for the fleas.6

God finds a way for us -- even in the darkest valley. And so, we take heart and have faith that God will find a way… even where seems to be no way. This is why we can proclaim with the Psalmist, “I will dwell in the house of the Lord, forever.”

As our Good Shepherd Jesus’ promises a little later in the Gospel of John, “In my Father’s house there are many rooms and I go to prepare a place for you.” Jesus has a place for you in the house of the Lord – forever.  

And to this, our response is gratitude. Even on the darkest day. For each day, God is with us. And so I encourage you to find a way – if you don’t already – to practice gratitude every day. It doesn’t have to be fancy. It can be a gratitude journal or a part of your morning and / or evening prayers. Or at your dinner table. Or just saying these four words, “I’m so grateful for… and then fill in the blank.” We have so much for which we can be grateful, our cup overflows. And for this, I am so grateful for our Good Shepherd Jesus.  Amen.

May 8, 2022                    Faith-Lilac Way Lutheran                 Pastor Pam Stalheim Lane

1 Rev. Dr. Rolf Jacobson January 24, 2022, ChurchAnew

2https://positivepsychology.com/neuroscience-of-gratitude/

3 https://goop.com/wellness/mindfulness/brene-brown-gratitude-practice

4Brene Brown,https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2IjSHUc7TXM  

5 David Steindl-Rast, Gratefulness, The Heart Of Prayer

6 Corrie ten Boom, The Hiding Place, 1974.

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Called to Follow

The year was 1990. The Berlin Wall had fallen.  The formerly powerful East German leader Erich Honecker and his wife Margot, the powerful and ruthless East German Education Minister, were ousted from power and their gated community. They were homeless. Despite his wife’s initial misgivings, Pastor Uve Holmer and his wife and their family of 10 children, took the Honeckers into their home. They were not supporters of the Honeckers or the East German state. In fact, the state’s anti-religious policies that the Honeckers had enacted harmed their family and barred their children – all 10 of them – from going to college. And yet, Pastor Holmer felt called, by God, to practice what he preached.1

Ananias faced a similar dilemma. When God called him in a vision, Ananias, like Isaiah, immediately said, “Here I am!” But when he found out that the Lord was asking him to go and lay hands on Saul and bring him into his home, Ananias questioned the assignment.  “Really? This guy? But he has done evil things and plans to stop us from proclaiming your name. Surely, you don’t want me to heal him?”  But the Lord said, “Go.” And Ananias went. 

Ananias is not remembered as a great evangelist, preacher and teacher like Paul and Peter. His name is only mentioned one other time in the Bible, when Paul retells the story later in Acts. But because Ananias, listened to God and did the will of God, despite the potential risk to himself and against his own judgment, Saul was healed and baptized and became Paul, an apostle to the Gentiles and the Jewish people.

Ananias was devout and faithful and an example of how God uses ordinary faithful people to do God’s work in the world and to share God’s love and God’s story. And that is still true today.

Sometimes, like with Saul, the call story is dramatic. He is blinded and scales fall from his eyes when Ananias prays for him. Or like Peter, who is “re-called” by Jesus, and reassured that despite his denying Jesus, Jesus has not denied him.

But for many of us, our call to living as a Christian, as a baptized child of God is not as dramatic as Peter’s or Paul’s. And yet, your call to be a follower is no less a call from God. For all who are baptized in Christ are called to follow Jesus all the days of our lives. And, all of you who have brought your children for baptism, and all of you who have been sponsors or Godparents and all those who have been present in the congregation for a baptism, have vowed before God, to nurture, to support, and pray for the baptized children of God. It is our calling to teach and to share God’s word and God’s love with others. This is what God calls us to do.

Can you recall people in your life who have supported you in your faith? Can you recall times in which you have supported others in their faith? My grandmother was my babysitter when I was young and she loved to read Bible stories to me. Mrs. Olson, my Kindergarten Sunday School teacher, always encouraged me. Don, my Confirmation mentor, challenged me to read the prophets with an ear for the truth and the Good News. When a huge storm flattened his wheat crop, my father taught me the importance of trusting in God despite the evidence. My mother was an inspiration. And that is just the beginning of the people who have nurtured me. I’m guessing and hoping that you too have had people in your life who have encouraged you to listen to God’s word, to trust in the Holy Spirit and not to be afraid.

I also know that many of you have been encouragers of my faith – and I hope and pray that I have been an encourager of yours. For that is what we do in Christian community – we encourage one another to listen for the Word of God and will of God in our lives and then strive to follow where God leads. 

This week when I visited with David Bjorkquist in the hospital, he told me stories of people who had encouraged him in his faith over the last couple of years. He told about having coffee with his Catholic neighbor and puzzling together about issues of faith. And then he mentioned the scores of people who wrote on his caring bridge site and the cards he received and the encouragement – especially from a person from our congregation who visited him faithfully when he was in a care center– until the pandemic hit and he no longer could do so. David was also thankful for your prayers now as he is back in the hospital – and he is praying for you.

Another person who I visited recently told me of the encouragement she received from the phone calls and cards and worship materials that she received during the pandemic. Another told me of the strength that she felt, knowing that she was being lifted up by prayer.

These may seem like little actions. But each action, each prayer, makes a difference. Each action, each prayer knits together the community of faith that we share. Each telling of God’s story spreads and deepens the faith of another. It is our job to plant the seeds of faith, to nurture and to pray for one another.

We are called to share God’s Good News in a variety of ways and, like Ananias, we are called to follow where God’s Holy spirit leads us. However, not every action that we take in the name of Christ, and not every prayer we pray or every word we share brings about a transformation in another like the one that occurred with Saul. For while it is our calling to follow Jesus and to plant seeds of faith, God is the one who makes them grow.

After taking in the formerly powerful Erich and Margot Honecker, Pastor Holmer and his wife did their best to help their lodgers reflect critically on their situation, hoping to help them see the harm that they had caused and the alternative of living a life of faith. But after ten long weeks of caring for an ailing Erich, while protests were going on outside their doors from neighbors who wanted revenge and justice, the Honeckers were exiled to Chili because Erich was too sick to stand trial. Neither of the Honeckers were repentant and they never became Christians. Scales never fell from their eyes. So was Pastor Holmer’s act of courage a failure?

Looking back, retired pastor Holmer has no regrets. He remembers Erich Honecker as a sick man and quotes Martin Luther who said, “When my enemy is ill, he is no longer my enemy.”2  And then Holmer said, “On Sundays we pray to ‘forgive us our sins, as we forgive those who have sinned against us…’ Did we really want to pray that and not live it?”3

The Holy Spirit was still working – just not in the way that he had first hoped. The Holy Spirit did not magically transform the Honeckers but instead, it helped a pastor to forgive the harm that Erich and Margot Honecker had done – not to all of East Germany – but the harm that was done to him and to his family.

Brothers and sisters, friends in Christ, we cannot know how the Holy Spirit is working – but are called to trust that God is at work, in us and through us. And that by God’s grace – and not our power – Christ will redeem the whole world. Thanks be to God. Amen.

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Sunday Sermon

The story of Thomas demonstrates the power of FOMO.  FOMO as many of you know is an acronym meaning the “fear of missing out.”  FOMO describes very real fears and emotions that are deep inside each and every one of us.  FOMO is the feeling of apprehension that one is either not in the know or is missing out on information, events, or experiences that could make one's life better.  FOMO is also associated with a fear of regret, which may lead to concerns that one might miss an opportunity for social interaction, a novel experience, a memorable event, or the chance to advance one’s career.  FOMO is characterized by a desire to stay continually connected with what others are doing, and can be described as the fear that deciding not to participate is the wrong choice.  FOMO is very real and it is really powerful and it can cause one to feel negatively about oneself and their life.

Businesses know the power of FOMO and use it to maximize their revenue.  I think that the best example of this in our community is the State Fair.  Yes, I know that there is going to be a State Fair preview over Memorial Day weekend but the real State Fair is open for twelve days ending on Labor Day.  I like the State Fair, but I also like other cultural institutions that we are fortunate to have in the Twin Cities.  Over the years I have enjoyed my experiences visiting the Minneapolis Institute of Art, the Walker Art Center, the Museum of Russian Art, the Bell Museum, the Mill City Museum and the Minnesota History Center.  In my eleven years in the Twin Cities these are among my favorite museums and I have visited each of them at least once but I do not visit them every season or every year.  However, before the pandemic hit, I had a streak of visiting the State Fair for seven straight years.  I do not necessarily like the State Fair that much more than the other attractions that I have mentioned but the State Fair is good at taking advantage of FOMO.  The museums in the Twin Cities are open virtually every day.  Like many of you I am really busy and my leisure time is limited.  Now that I am feeling more comfortable being out in public again returning to one of my favorite museums seems like a good idea, however it is easy to come up with excuses.  When something is always open FOMO is not a factor.  I suggest to my wife that we should go to a museum when the weather is better, or when we have more time like when her spring busy season is over, or when I am done with internship.  When there is no deadline or no sense of urgency often nothing gets done.  When the State Fair starts in August the power of FOMO kicks into high gear.  You hear a broadcast from the State Fair that gets you thinking about going.  Your friends tell you about their experience either during a conversation or on social media.  You then realize that you have to get there before midnight on Labor Day and all of a sudden FOMO has motivated you to achieve the distinction of being a thirty-year customer of the State Fair.

Thomas missed out on more than a Pronto Pup.  He missed out on something a million times greater.  Thomas had an opportunity to see the Risen Jesus on the greatest day in human history and he was nowhere to be found.  Mary Magdalene, Peter, and the beloved disciple who is certainly not Thomas saw the empty tomb.  Later when she was crying outside the tomb Mary was comforted by the Risen Lord.  On that Easter evening Jesus appeared before a group of unnamed disciples which of course did not include Thomas.  The Gospel of John records three convincing proofs of the Resurrection on that Easter Day that were available for Thomas to witness but he missed every single one of them.  The author of the Gospel of John does not use the term “the twelve” during the story of Jesus’ appearance to the disciples on Easter evening which leaves open the possibility there were others outside of “the twelve” who were present as well as the possibility that others of “the twelve” were not there.  Other followers of Jesus may not have been there but Thomas is the only one who is specifically mentioned which seems to indicate that Thomas is the one who was the most devastated about missing out.

FOMO is real and it causes both anxiety and distress.  I cannot imagine how difficult that week was for Thomas.  The text does not mention when the disciples told him what they had seen.  It is possible that he knew as early as Monday morning that he had missed the appearance of Jesus.  When I worked in consulting and corporate tax, I always remember Monday as the day where FOMO burned fiercely as people talked about their weekends.  Those Monday office conversations were the perfect environment for creating jealousy inside the person who had missed the great meal, the new movie, or the big game.  Thomas was surely emotionally crushed as it did not seem possible that Jesus would appear again the next Sunday.  Thomas surely thought that he had missed out on the biggest thing ever.

Thomas could have been consumed by jealousy, anger, and shame and he could have left the Jesus movement behind.  Thomas could have reasoned that there was a reason that he had missed out and that it just was not meant to be for him to be a disciple.  Thankfully, Thomas did not react that way, and he made sure that he would not miss out again.  His presence with the disciples a week later indicates that despite missing out on the big day he was still meeting with the disciples as they were trying to figure out the path of their mission and ministry.  Lightning does strike twice as the Risen Jesus appears again and this time Thomas is there.  Jesus freely and willingly gives Thomas exactly what he requests.  Jesus invites Thomas to put his finger in the mark of the nails and to put his hand in his side.  The text does not indicate whether or not Thomas does actually touch Jesus but just being in Christ’s presence and being invited to touch the wounds is enough for Thomas to exclaim the boldest affirmation of Christ in the entire Gospel of John when he says “My Lord and my God!”  Thomas may have had doubts but he also had belief and seeing the Risen Christ inspired him to proclaim his deep belief in Jesus.

This bold statement is likely not the end of the Thomas story.  According to traditional accounts of the Saint Thomas Christians of modern-day Kerala in India, Thomas traveled outside the Roman Empire to preach the Gospel, and he reached modern-day Kerala on the southwest coast of India in the year 52 CE.  To this day Thomas is considered the patron saint of Christians on the Indian subcontinent.  Kerala has a population of 34 million people and today Christians make up 18% of the residents of Kerala which is the highest percentage of Christians in any Indian state.  Kerala also has the highest literacy rate and the longest life expectancy of any Indian state.  It may be a stretch to attribute these things to an apostle who visited two thousand years ago but the fact that millions of Christians in India hold the belief that it was Thomas who brought Christianity to their community is a strong witness to the reality that the Risen Lord enables faith and changes lives in ways that spread the love of Christ to others so that nobody misses out on experiencing the Risen Jesus. 

Like Thomas we are all both doubters and believers.  We like to think of ourselves primarily as believers but it is normal to have doubts.  Our doubts often cause us to miss seeing the Risen Christ in our midst.  The fear of missing out is very real but thankfully we are given many opportunities to see the Risen Christ in our daily lives.  The Risen Christ can take many different forms.  Sometimes we encounter the Risen Jesus in an act of service.  I remember one snowy day when I was volunteering at a community meal and one of the guests asked me for the snow shovel was so that he could clear the walk so that the guests with mobility issues could safely enter the building.  I have also seen the Risen Lord in acts of compassion just like when I was a chaplain at North Memorial ministering to a grieving family and as people were breaking down in tears a nurse appeared with boxes of tissues.  I have seen the Risen Christ in the scriptures when a passage that I have read many times before suddenly hits me in a different way and opens up a new insight that I had not previously seen.  I could also list other signs here but it is impossible for one to document all of the ways that Jesus is present in our midst.

The fear of missing out is a very real phenomenon, however we should not be paralyzed by the fear of missing out.  We have many opportunities to see the Risen Christ as the constant presence of the Risen Lord means that with Jesus we never truly miss out as Jesus is always in front of us, offering himself to us and inviting us to see him and to touch him.  Encounters with Jesus can and do happen frequently even if we cannot predict when they will happen.  These encounters turn our fears and doubts into hope and belief.  Christ appears in the midst of our doubts and strengthens our belief as the Risen Christ works through us so that we can share what we have seen with others and that others can also share Christ’s presence with us as well.              

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Remember and Rejoice!

Easter Sunday | Pastor Pam Stalheim Lane 

I forgot. How many times have you said that? Maybe it was your keys, phone, an appointment, someone’s birthday? I’ve said it way too many times. We all forget things from time to time, but it’s especially easy to forget things when we are grieving, stressed or distracted by other things. My aunt liked to remind her family that on the morning of her wedding, she was all ready to go to the church and she went into her upstairs bedroom to get her veil. Meanwhile, everyone else in her family was so distracted by the details of what they were each supposed to do on that day that they piled into their cars… and it wasn’t until they got to the church that they realized, - they left the bride at home. 

Mary Magdalene, Joanna and the other women were understandably more than a little distracted when they went to the tomb. They were grieving the loss of the one who had healed them – Jesus had exorcised 7 demons from Mary Magdalene and had healed Joanna and the other women from various diseases as he traveled throughout Galilee. Luke reports that after being healed, these women followed Jesus, listened to his teachings and supported him and the disciples out of their own resources.

But now, as they brought spices to anoint his dead body – the last gift that they could offer - their world looked bleak, full of death. The powers of evil – working through the brutal force of the Roman army – had killed the one that they thought was the Messiah and along with him whatever hopes they might have had for a different kind of world.

Dashed hopes. Death. Shattered dreams. It sounds all too familiar.  Just as we begin to come out of the pandemic, which was marked by isolation, disease and death, we find ourselves in a world that is less safe. Bombs devastate train stations and maternity wards. People are shot in a subway. Children are dying of hunger. The death toll is mounting. Regardless of where you get your news from, the news is not good.

Yet it is into this very world that Jesus came, teaching, preaching and proclaiming the Kingdom of God as he healed the sick of heart and mind and forgave the sins – even of those who tortured and killed him.

Who could blame the women if their thoughts were not on Jesus’ teachings that day as they brought spices to the tomb? They were living in a world of death and hurt – much like ours.  And so of course they were “perplexed” when they found the gravestone moved and the tomb empty. Of course they were terrified when angels - men in dazzling clothes -- suddenly appeared.

But the angels – not bound by this world of death and hurt - seem surprised to see them and ask, “Why do you look for the living among the dead? He is not dead but is risen.” “Remember.” Remember the words of Jesus. And then they remind the women of Jesus’ words prophesizing his death and resurrection. Of course Jesus is not in the tomb. He’s not dead! 

And then… as if the light from the angels shone a light into their hearts and minds, in an “aha” moment, he women remember. They remember Jesus’ words and the promises of God and go to tell the disciples and all the rest the good news.

At first, none of the disciples believed the women. They called their good news “an “idle” tale – which is a polite translation of: “hogwash,” “fake news” – or worse. But later, after a visit from Jesus and some work on the part of the Holy Spirit, Peter and the others not only remember Jesus’ words, but are convicted that the Good News of Jesus is true, not only for them, but for all people. As Peter says in the book of Acts, God shows no partiality. The love of God and forgiveness of sin is for all people. You can count on that too.

Remember. Just as Mary Magdalene and Joanna remembered and then shared the Good news, and then Peter and the disciples remembered and shared the Good News, so I invite you today to remember the words of Jesus and share the Good news of the promises of God which have been given “for you” and for all people.

Remember. Soon, you will again hear the words of Jesus proclaimed, “This is my body… eat this in remembrance of me. This is my blood.. drink this in remembrance of me…”  Remember the promise of forgiveness of sins is given for you.

Remember. Today as you walk by the Baptismal font, remember that you were baptized as a child of God and God claims you as God’s beloved.

And wherever you go, and wherever you are, Remember the promise of Jesus who said, “I will be with you always.”

Jesus told stories to help people remember. So today I have a story for you. This is the story of a farmer and a hired hand.

“A hired hand was once applying to work for a farmer. When the farmer interviewed him, he would respond to every question by saying, “I sleep well at night.” The farmer thought his responses to be a little odd, but decided to hire him anyway.

One night, not long after, a great storm arose, and the farmer leapt from bed and called for his hired hand to help. When he could not rouse him, he went out himself, only to find that everything was already sheltered and tied down. The farmer then understood the worker’s comment, “I sleep well at night.” He slept because he had done everything needed in case of a storm. From then on, the farmer also slept well at night.”1

Out of God’s great love, God sent – not a hired hand -but Jesus, his only son, to save us and redeem us. And that is why we not only remember the words of Jesus but we can trust in his promises. By dying and rising again, Jesus has defeated the power of death so that we might have life in him. This is why we can rejoice.  Thanks be to God. Amen. 

1Adapted from God Pause Sunday, February 13, 2022 https://www.luthersem.edu › godpause

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Maundy Thursday

Pastor Pastor Pam Stalheim Lane | Reflection

The apostle Paul was not in the upper room with Jesus on the night in which he was betrayed, and yet when he shares the story of the Last supper it moves from a story told in the past tense to a proclamation of what is happening now. This is the same way the Jewish community has always remembered the Passover.

When the Passover story is told in the book of Deuteronomy, it begins by recounting the story in the past: “A wandering Aramean was my ancestor, he went down into Egypt and lived there as an alien…” But very soon, the narrator changes from talking about “him” to identifying as the community. Reading again from Deuteronomy it says, “When the Egyptians treated “us” harshly… we cried to the Lord and the Lord brought “us” out of Egypt.”  In this way, whenever the Passover story is told, it is not just the story of the Jewish ancestors but it becomes the story of the current Jewish community. 1

In the same manner, as Paul writes about the Lord’s supper, he begins by recounting an event in the past but moves to remembering and proclaiming a present reality for the community that is gathered. When we hear, “the Lord Jesus takes bread and breaks it and says, “This is my body that is for you. Do this for the remembrance of Me” and again as Jesus takes the cup and says, “This cup is the new covenant in my blood. Do this, as often as you drink it, in remembrance of me” we aren’t just remembering an old story that we have heard. This is our story too.  Christ’s body and blood are given for you just as much as for those disciples gathered at the Upper Room.

And the story is not over. As Paul writes, “For as often as you eat this bread and drink the cup, you proclaim the Lord’s death until he comes.” The promise is that Christ will come again. But…have you ever wondered why Paul says we proclaim the Lord’s death until he comes again and doesn’t mention the resurrection?  

Paul is making some assumptions when he speaks and writes this way to people of faith. Just as when the Jewish community celebrates the Passover, they don’t only celebrate the night that the angel of death passed over the doors of the male Hebrew children without killing them. That word, “Passover,” is the beginning of the story of God’s presence with them through the Red Sea, through the trials of the desert and finally coming to the promised land. In the same way, when Paul says that we proclaim the Lord’s death, he is summing up the whole story of Jesus death and resurrection and presence with us through the Holy Spirit until that day when Jesus Christ comes again.

Jesus’ story is not over and we have a role to play. We have a story to tell –in the words that we speak about what we believe and in the way that we live our lives. Our whole lives are meant to be a proclamation of the living Christ.

And so, brothers and sisters in Christ, let us remember that as we eat the bread which is his body and drink the cup which is his blood we are to proclaim not only Christ’s death and resurrection but also the living and active life of Christ. Everywhere you go, you are Christ’s witness. Amen.

1The New Interpreter’s Bible, Volume X, Abingdon Press 2002 J. Paul Samply First Letter to the Corinthians page 935            

 

Vicar Kyle Anderson | Meditation

 What would you do if you knew that your enemies were looking for you in order to seize you?  I would be praying with all of my heart and soul for deliverance from the situation.  In this case there were multiple possibilities for Jesus with the full power of God at his disposal to have avoided being captured.  Jesus does not resist at all.  Jesus does not attempt to flee.  Jesus does not resort to violence as he tells Peter to put his sword away.  Jesus even does the officers’ job for them.  He asks them the question “Whom are you looking for?”  When they reply “Jesus of Nazareth” they actually do not immediately arrest him which may indicate that they doubt that they have found the right person.  Jesus then goes on to identify himself by saying “I am he” just to make sure that they know that they have found the right person to take into custody.  When confronted by the divine the soldiers fall to the ground which creates the perfect opportunity to flee, however Jesus chooses to remain there.  Jesus then repeats the question “Whom are you looking for?” and he again identifies himself.  Not only does Jesus fail to resist arrest but he actually makes the task easier for those who have come to take him away. 

Jesus did not resist arrest because according to the Gospel of John this was the moment for which he came into the world.  Jesus came into the world to be the light of the world and to save the world.  Jesus seized this moment as his time had come.  The first words spoken by Jesus in the Gospel of John are to two disciples and Jesus asks them “What are you looking for?”  Now as Jesus nears the end of his earthly ministry, he asks those who came to arrest him “Whom are you looking for?”  This is not the last time that Jesus will ask this question.  Three days later he will approach a weeping Mary Magdalene and ask her “Whom are you looking for?”  In each of these different contexts Jesus asks the same question.  On this night of darkness and despair we are also seeking Jesus.  War rages in Ukraine, the uninsured are losing access to free COVID vaccines and free COVID testing, and kids around the world including many in our own community are going to bed hungry tonight.  We too are hoping to find Jesus and the good news is that in spite of the world’s troubles Jesus knows that we are looking for him and he makes it easy for us to find him.

God works in completely unexpected ways.  It does not seem possible that Jesus allowing himself to be arrested by the forces of evil is going to end three days later in the salvation of the world.  However, Jesus is fully in control of the situation.  The arrest happens because Jesus enables it to happen.  Jesus is willing to drink the cup that his Father has given to him.  In the Old Testament the cup can symbolize wrath or it can symbolize joy and salvation.  Tonight, as darkness comes over the land it may appear that the cup mentioned here is the cup of wrath.  However, the cup from which Jesus drinks will actually bring joy and salvation to the world as the arrest of Jesus and his death on the cross is only the beginning of a story that will end with an empty tomb and Jesus rising again to ask the question “Whom are you looking for?”       

Basketball coach John Wooden said that “the most powerful leadership tool you have is your own personal example.”  Jesus knows that he is coming to the end of his earthly ministry and that he still has important lessons to teach his disciples.  Before launching into a lengthy farewell discourse Jesus performs a powerful act to demonstrate both love and service.  It was ordinary hospitality to offer guests water to wash their feet after a journey in sandals on dusty roads.  Usually, the host was not expected to wash the feet of their guests but the host was simply expected to provide a basin of water and a towel.  If anyone was ever assigned the task of washing feet it was a slave.  It was also common for disciples to wash the feet of their teacher.  Nobody at the table would have expected or would have wanted Jesus to wash their feet.  Peter and the disciples may have been surprised about the foot washing but they should not have been as throughout his ministry Jesus defied expectations.  Jesus ate with tax collectors and sinners.  Jesus touched lepers who were in need of healing.  Jesus was the Good Shepherd who cared for the poor and the oppressed rather than catering to the rich and the powerful.  The personal example of Jesus is one of humble service to the community.

When he washes the feet of his disciples Jesus provides a model for his disciples to emulate.  The disciples are to perform acts of service for one another.  For Christians status and rank do not matter but all actions performed by Christians are to follow the example of Jesus and are to be based on love and service.  Peter opposes Jesus by initially refusing to let him wash his feet but Jesus is very determined to carry out this act and definitively demonstrate that love and service are the foundations of Christian community.  After he has washed their feet, Jesus then tells his disciples that they are to wash each other’s feet.  Washing feet was common in the life of that society so Jesus is calling his disciples to show their love and service in the routines of daily living.  In modern times with paved roads and sidewalks and closed toe shoes foot washing is no longer a regular practice but we can all think of examples of ways that we can love and serve each other in the course of our daily lives.  Simple unexpected acts of love and service reflect the mission and ministry of Jesus.

Jesus then reinforces what he has just taught his disciples by example by referring to it as a new commandment.  The commandment to love one’s neighbor as oneself went all the way back to the book of Leviticus.  Here Jesus commands them to love one another just as Jesus loves us which further expands the commandment to love the neighbor.  Jesus expects his love to be shared by his followers who in turn will share it with the whole world.  If we love just as Jesus loves us then the Christian community will inspire love and service that will spread not only to our neighbors but throughout the world.  In washing the feet of his disciples Jesus provides a model for them to follow.  Through his personal example Jesus demonstrates that acts of love and service both great and small have the power to change the world.

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Palm Sunday

We have just heard one hundred fourteen verses of the Greatest Story Ever Told and this powerful and compelling narrative started with four simple words: “when the hour came.”  Yes, the hour did come and Jesus had been anticipating its arrival.  Jesus knew quite early in his earthly ministry that he had a vocation to fulfill and that he was starting on a path to Jerusalem where he would suffer and be rejected before his eventual glorification.  According to Luke 9:31 Moses and Elijah appeared during the Transfiguration and they spoke of Jesus’ departure which he was about to accomplish at Jerusalem.  The teaching that Jesus did on his journey was so radical that when he arrived in Jerusalem he was arrested, tortured, and executed as a criminal by the Roman Empire.  The Crucifixion was not merely a moment in history but it is an event that continues to have a major impact as its importance is not just limited to its historical context.  As we just heard Jesus ate a Passover meal with his disciples.  In the Jewish tradition Passover is not only a remembrance of the deliverance of the Israelites from Egyptian slavery but it is also a chance for future generations to live the story of the Exodus as their own story.  In a similar manner, Christians are invited into the story of the Passion of the Christ not only to remember it as a historic event but also to live the story as a current reality.  The hour came on a day almost two thousand years ago and the hour comes again during this Holy Week.

Each of the Passion narratives in the Gospels share commonalities but they also have some differences.  I want to emphasize three things that are unique to Luke’s account of the Passion.  First, in Luke Jesus offers the gift of forgiveness.  From the cross Jesus says “Father, forgive them; for they do not know what they are doing.”  As he is suffering on the cross Jesus offers a prayer for those who were involved in his crucifixion.  In the immediate context the prayer is for the Roman soldiers who are carrying out this death sentence but I think that it also includes us.  We live in need of forgiveness each and every day.  We are complicit in systems that pollute the environment, that leave many people without adequate housing, healthcare, and nutrition, and that result in the oppression of minority communities.  We do not always know what we are doing and we are not always aware of the impact that our behavior has on the lives of others.  Therefore, we live in constant need of God’s forgiveness.     

In addition to forgiveness Jesus also offers us the promise of salvation.  When the repentant criminal asked Jesus to remember him, Jesus told him that “today you will be with me in Paradise.”  In the midst of suffering and agony Jesus remains focused on his mission.  Jesus has come into the world to save the world.  If we are willing to leave our sinful ways and turn toward Jesus, we see that salvation is a reality just as it was for the repentant criminal.  In even the darkest moments like times of war, pandemic, and economic turmoil Jesus remains focused on saving us.  Yes, Jesus remembers us no matter how bleak things seem to be.

Finally, when we encounter Jesus, we are changed and transformed.  Many in the crowd that day came out to see a spectacle.  They cried out “away with this fellow!” and “crucify, crucify him!”  At the end of this Passion narrative the mood of many in the crowd had been altered.  After Jesus died Luke tells us that when the crowds had seen what had taken place, they returned home beating their breasts.  By the end of the Passion story those in the crowd who were crying for blood now appear to be repentant.  The crowds who had shown up for the spectacle are now contrite.  These people who witnessed the Crucifixion and the suffering of Jesus were changed by seeing these events.  When we encounter our Lord and Savior Jesus, our lives and perspectives are changed.

How has the hour come in your life?Do you feel the power of the gifts of forgiveness, salvation, and transformation that Jesus is offering to each and every one of us?This week I invite you to live the story of Holy Week not just as a remembrance but as a current reality as we gather as a community both in person and online to commemorate Maundy Thursday and Good Friday.Yes, the hour did come for Jesus but the story is not over as this week the hour comes again and we are invited to live fully in the knowledge that forgiveness, salvation, and transformation are freely available to us each and every day.

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