Monday, May 25, 2020

What to do until (or as?) the messiah comes

At-home worship from Sunday, May 24
Ascension Sunday

Entering a quiet time (if you have a candle, light it and let these words quiet your heart):

Lord, prepare me to be a sanctuary -- pure and holy, tried and true;
and with thanksgiving I'll be a living sanctuary for you.

Opening Thoughts and Prayer

Today is the last Sunday of the Easter season.  Thursday was “Day of the Ascension of our Lord.”  That’s the day the Christian church celebrates the story of how 40 days after his resurrection from death, Jesus is raised from Earth to heaven – which means not so much that he is now up there and not down here, as it means he is present in a more universally intimate way to all of Earth, beyond the limits of what we can see and touch. 

In the ancient world “the heavens” is where the gods live and from where they constantly influence life on Earth.  So to say Jesus is raised to heaven is really to say he is now in that place of the gods, influencing life on Earth as they were said to.


We pray:

Loving and holy One, 
God of all creation, crafter of the cosmos,
hear our prayer
and let us find comfort, not fear
in the immensity and unending mystery
of all you have made.

Lord of this Earth, 
you who came to show us
the presence and the unchanging good purpose of God
in making the Earth and all its creatures and us to be,
hear our prayer
and help us to confess 
how we have missed the mark and made a mess of so much,
help us also to hear and accept 
your words and the truth of forgiveness.

Holy Spirit 
at work in all the world, at work in us and in others,
help us to pause …
and be silent …
and to quiet our pride, our fear and our shame 
long enough, to be aware
of the holiness, 
the light, 
the connection with God, 
the connection with all God has made
that is at the heart of who we are.

Gather us in, and help us to know
who we are with you and with one another. 
In the name of Jesus, the one we call Christ,
and by holiness of spirit in us as in others.  Amen.

Song:  “Be Still”

There is not a single heartache that our Lord will not heal.
There is not a single sorrow that His heart does not feel.
There is not a single problem; there is not a single care
There is not a single burden that He will not share.
Be still, be still, be still and listen.
Be still before the Lord.
Be still, be still, be still and listen.
Be still, and hear His voice.   Be still.

He brings us hope and healing rest from toil and pain and tears.
He brings a peace to calm distress and banish all our fears.
He never bids us go away, nor turns a deafened ear,
His tender voice calls one and all; we need but only hear.
Be still, be still, be still and listen.
Be still before the Lord.
Be still, be still, be still and listen.
Be still, and hear His voice.  Be still.
                                                                                       
Reading:  Acts 1:1-11

The Book of the Acts of the Apostles was written by the same author as the Gospel of Luke, and the two books are part 1 and part 2 of the single, continuing story of the good news of God’s kingdom appearing on Earth. 

In part 1 – the Gospel, Jesus announces the kingdom of God and begins to gather and teach a community to live it out.  Now in part 2 – the Book of Acts, what Jesus began is carried on by the community of those who follow him.  At the beginning of the Book, the author prepares us for the transfer of spiritual power from Jesus to his followers.

Dear Theophilus:

In my first book I wrote about all the things that Jesus did and taught from the time he began his work until the day he was taken up to heaven.  Before he was taken up, he gave instructions with the help of the Holy Spirit to those he had chosen as his apostles.

For forty days after his death he appeared to them many times in ways that proved beyond doubt that he was alive. They saw him, and he talked with them about the Kingdom of God.  And when they came together, he gave them this order: “Do not leave Jerusalem, but wait for the gift I told you about, the gift my Father promised.  John baptized with water, but in a few days you will be baptized with the Holy Spirit.”

When the apostles met together with Jesus, they asked him, “Lord, will you at this time give the Kingdom back to Israel?  Will we have a king of our own again?”

Jesus said to them, “How and when the Father will bring all things to their good end is not something you know.  But I tell you this: when the Holy Spirit comes upon you, you will be filled with power, and you will be witnesses for me in Jerusalem, in all of Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth.”  After saying this, he was taken up to heaven as they watched him, and a cloud hid him from their sight.

They still had their eyes fixed on the sky as he went away, when two men dressed in white suddenly stood beside them and said, “Galileans, why are you standing there looking up at the sky?  This Jesus, who was taken from you into heaven, will come back in the same way that you saw him go to heaven.”


Reflection

One of the stories told here at Fifty is about a young child who started coming to worship here a few years ago with no previous introduction to church or anything related to it.  She was brought by her mother to learn about God, and Jesus, and living a Christian life.

The young girl – maybe 5 or 6, or even 7 or 8 – was unsure of what to expect, but prepared for anything.  She sat through the service with her mom.  She was struck by the distinctive look and warmth of the sanctuary, the friendliness of the people, the easy flow of the service, and the tall, dignified, white-haired man in a long white robe who talked a lot from a raised platform at the front of the sanctuary and whom everyone accorded great respect.

It was unlike anything the little girl had seen.  Later when her mom asked her what she thought and if she had any questions, there was only one thing on her mind.  “That tall man at the front all dressed in white,” she said, “is that God?”

Not likely.  Even though I – and maybe other ministers, sometimes act as though we are.

But isn’t this the way we often see God?  Raised up above us, dazzling white (in every sense of the word) and wise, commanding respect from all.

What is your image of God?  In your mind, where does God dwell today?  And how does God appear to make things good for all?


When I was a child and even far into adulthood, this -- a dazzlingly white-robed, glorious person raised up above us all, is also how I imagined Jesus at the end in the story about his ascending from Earth to heaven.  And how I imagined he will be known when he comes back.  His work on Earth all done.  Glorious and dazzling.  Crown of gold on his head.  Royal scepter of power and authority held firmly in his hand.

But is that really how he appears at the end to his followers as he ascends to the heavens?  And is that the way they will see him as he returns to keep unveiling God’s presence and God’s kingdom on Earth?  To make Earth good for all God has called into being?

In the Bible the risen Jesus still has the scars and wounds of his crucifixion in his body – in his hands, his feet and his sides.  Probably the stripes of the whip on his back as well.  And does he ever have a gold crown, or just the blood marks and bruises from the crown of thorns that was forced on his brow.  And a royal scepter in his hand?  Or does he still appear at their side with a servant’s towel draped over his arm, forever ready to wash the feet of those who are ready to betray and deny him?   

Why wouldn’t he?  Because isn’t that how his work and God’s work is done on Earth?  And the world, as bad as it can be, is made good, as good as it’s meant to be?

When ministerial robes first began to be worn in the church they were meant to be representative of the dress of servants of different kinds.  Some robes were patterned after those of lawyers and scholars, who gave their lives to learning and speaking the truth to the world regardless of the cost.  Others were patterned after the simplest kind of servant garb – a simple tunic that was often the only thing worn by any household servant.

I wonder, if we were to start all over designing ministerial robes today, what they would be patterned after. 

Hospital scrubs, maybe – the kind worn by everyone on the medical team from nurses and doctors to cleaners and porters?  The lab coat of a medical researcher giving their life to developing a COVID-19 vaccine for others?  Maybe the company shirt and uncomfortable face mask and gloves of a grocery cashier or pharmacy clerk serving the public in risky times.  The yellow-x’ed safety vest of a garbage collector, handling and hauling away everyone’s discarded trash to keep our homes and streets safe and clean. 

All the people we call “heroes” these days.  And I wonder if it’s more to the point and more helpful to drop the word “hero” and call them instead “real and true human beings” living out the love and care of neighbour and of others that true human being is about.

Who are some of the people who have been “true human beings” for you or for your family these days?  Who’ve restored your faith in humanity by being a friend of neighbour no matter the cost?  Who have given you a whiff of hope for how true and human and good your own life can be?  And already is?


When people saw Jesus they were attracted to him because of the deep and true humanity he lived out among them.  He knew God’s way of making the world good, and he spoke of it wherever he went no matter the cost.  He invited and gathered people across all kinds of divides into the most unlikely and healing experiences of community.  He helped people know much they really could care for others without it being the end of their world.  He set people free from the weight of their sins, their broken past and the way they used to be, and from the prison of forever holding onto other people’s sins against them.  He set people free from going back always to the past, and to look for God instead in the future that would continue to unfold for them and for others as they learned to follow him and walk in his way.

And isn’t this how the will and way of God are done on Earth as in heaven?  How the world is made good as God desires it to be made, and how the Christ – the living Word of God, is seen again and again among us and within us unveiling God’s kingdom on Earth for all?

He comes and it comes not with a bang but with … not with a whimper, but maybe as a whisper.  Not in a blaze of overpowering glory from somewhere above and beyond us, but by the power of the holy healing whisper all over the face of Earth, of true and new humanity being lived out among us and by us, over and over again rising from us like a prayer from Earth to heaven, and coming back to us as the answer from heaven to Earth. 

Thanks be to God.

Hymn:  “Make Me a Servant” (to read as a prayer)

Make me a servant, humble and meek
Lord, let me lift up those who are weak
And may the prayer of my heart always be
Make me a servant; make me a servant
Make me a servant today.

Closing Thoughts:

The conclusion to a sermon prepared by Rev. James Eaton of Albany, NY for his congregation for this Sunday:
 
The message of the angels (who appeared beside the disciples as they stood staring at the sky) is one we need to hear as well: don’t stand around waiting for Jesus.  [New life beyond what is changing and dying] comes from moving to make his vision a reality. Don’t wait for Jesus; don’t stand around. Wait for the power of the Spirit and when you feel it, live it. Don’t wait for Jesus, share the news that we can live for him today, loving God, living from God, loving others, letting that love blossom into those fruits of the spirit today. Our future isn’t just reopening, it’s renewal of our life as the body of Christ. Don’t wait for Jesus: he’s already going ahead, making the way for us, loving us, inspiring us. 


Amen.

Blessing:  “Go Now in Peace”

Go now in peace; never be afraid;
God will go with you each hour of every day.
Go now in faith -- steadfast, strong and true;
Know God will guide you in all you do.
Go now in love, and show that you believe;
Reach out to others so all the world can see:

God will be there watching from above.
Go now in peace, in faith and in love.

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