Ignorance is the Pits
…ignorance is a tough thing to fight. There’s a reason the phrase “ignorance is bliss” exists. Whether we’re not facing hard facts about the world or confronting difficult realities, or whether it’s more personal, and it’s just easier ignoring our own demons and insecurities and staying in this dark place— it might be dark, but it's what we know…
Little Devils Everywhere
…we’re constantly at risk of being taken advantage of, constantly at risk of falling for scare tactics, for signing dangerous deals with various devils…
All Our Bodies
Think about the way our bodies change and adapt and transform throughout this difficult and delicate life. Think about the many phases, our many different bodies. All our bodies. Think about the different people we become with each change, with each injury, with each surgery. And then imagine all our bodies with no pain, with no suffering…
Resurrection-Idea or Resurrection?
But I don’t necessarily think that Paul’s vision and Baruch’s vision have to be mutually exclusive, or in any kind of competition. I think that we can be skeptical, we can change with our minds with our circumstances, we can question and wonder and ponder, but we can also have some kind of absurd faith that with God, all things truly are possible…
As a Society
The resurrection, for all its glory and magic, is ultimately about the Love that God has for us, and the Love that we need to act out in the world. It’s about making sacrifices and doing without for the betterment of all. It’s about honoring and being one with those who mourn, those who weep, those who are addicts, those who struggle…
The Love Principle
…Paul is talking about capital L Love. He’s talking about living by way of Love. He’s talking about making sure every action you do, being done with Love in mind, with your fellow humankind in mind…
How Does This Serve the Interests of All?
So Paul came to warn them, this will fall apart if you don’t let everyone in, and let everyone be their true selves. This will all be for nothing if you try to segregate those who may be perceived as “weak” from the “strong.” The church won’t be able to function if it’s divided, if it’s made to mirror the hierarchal, unjust systems that already exist in the world, the very systems that we as Jesus-followers are trying to subvert, to overturn…
The Right to Joy
The wedding at Cana is a preview of what is possible. We can have a world with never-ending good wine. We can have a world in which we won’t have to wake up to an empty, messy house, missing our friends as the anxieties of a broken world creep back in.
In Bodily Form like a Black-Necked Stilt
…I hope we can take advantage of this time of another quiet isolation, and find different ways to pray, to meditate, to be mindful, to communicate. I hope we can take some pressure off of ourselves and know that there’s no wrong way to communicate with God. There’s no wrong way to be mindful. We can be fully in the present while discerning the past and seeing potential in the future…
Schwarzschild’s Star
…so even after tonight, we continue to wait for that star, that light, to break free from its prison of clouds. So as we wait, in the meantime, let us remember a young Karl Schwarzschild, before the horrors of war and this uncertain world brought upon despair upon him—let’s remember that brilliant, imaginative, and hopeful child looking up at the cloudy sky absolutely knowing that there was a guiding star there. Let’s remember Schwarzschild’s star…
Countdown to Christmas
A sermon from guest preacher, Rev. Connie Moser, for the Fourth Sunday in Advent, December 19th, 2021
Signs Within and Around
Jesus not telling us to no worry period—if we didn’t worry at all, it would be clear that we weren’t paying attention. But rather, he's telling us to not let the anxieties of this world completely consume us so as not to get burnt out and break down—because there is hope on the other side, and there is hope in the perfect world to come…
What is to Come
When we think of apocalypse, we think of the end. By definition, it is the ultimate destruction of the world as we know it—but that’s just the thing—it’s a destruction of the world as we know it. I don’t believe it’s some ultimate end—apocalypse just means “revealing.”
Just the Beginning
So much of what’s between the lines in this passage is about deciphering what is true and what is false, and, in the midst of strife and crises, to remain as calm as we can, and also vigilant. This is Jesus saying, there will be difficult times ahead—war, disasters, destruction—but amidst all this turmoil and chaos, we have to understand that this is not the end, and we cannot give up the fight to make this earth as it is in heaven…
Informed Sacrifice
So I actually think it’s kind of a big and disingenuous jump to go from Jesus saying, “look how corrupt the religious authorities are, along with this temple that they control” to “look at this widow giving her whole life to this corrupt system, we should all be like her.” It just doesn’t make sense to me…
So Far but So Close
…And so if we truly love God as we claim, we must also love our neighbor as ourselves. I believe going through life with attitudes like this—being more open-minded, more open to interpretation, less rigid, less strict—allows for so much more kindness. I think it allows for so much more understanding and love…
Throw Off Your Cloaks
…and it showed me how one way to be a true steward is to be the church out in the world, and make it known that congregations like ours, must always be present to ask, “What do you want me to do for you?” and mean it…
Care to Grow Wiser
…Hawthorne writes, “…people always grow more and more foolish, unless they care to grow wiser and wiser.” It takes work, Church, and care to keep up with the strange and difficult call of Jesus. The disciples, in theory, were up for that work, but they weren’t actually quite ready to make the radical moves and changes to their own thinking that Jesus was calling for…