Thursday, March 27, 2008

Alive to die no more

The following is this past Tuesday's God Pause devotion from Luther Seminary. The associated text is Psalm 16. It's been making me think. I hope you enjoy it:

Jesus Christ raised from the dead is an unsolvable problem for us. The reality of Easter is an omnipresent threat to our security and way of life. It means, in the words of author Philip Yancey, that "He's out there somewhere." What makes this matter all the more dire is that "He cannot die again ... " (Romans 6:9).
Consequently, Jesus has us cornered, without any possibility of us getting rid of him, pushing him out to Golgotha and crucifying him all over again. He can't die again, and this means that his unyielding will to forgive sinners cannot die either. What are we to do with such a God? It seems as if there is only one option available. In the end we may just have to look to him in faith, realizing that he is Lord of all things, including us!
Lord Jesus, create us anew in faith, content to be your creatures. Amen.

Daniel Shaw, chaplain
Camp Gargoyle, Al Asad, Iraq
Master of Divinity, 2002

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Alleluia! Christ is risen!


Good thing for me that the season of Easter lasts for 50 days. Plenty of time for alleluias.



We had a good day of celebration here at SOV on Sunday. We had to start the sunrise service a little later than the 6am scheduled start: the sun wasn't up enough yet for us to see. So, we got to start "early on the first day of the week, while it was still dark." All good. Even for those of us who are most definitely NOT early birds.


Resurrection day is my favorite day of the year, and gives meaning and purpose to the rest of the days.


I hope you had a blessed Resurrection day yourself, and that the joy of Easter is lingering into the week.


Alleluia! Christ is risen! He is risen indeed! Alleluia!

Friday, March 21, 2008

80 degrees and sunny. And somber.

"Happy death day" was the salutation in an email from my brother-in-law today. I think the irony was intended. (He's a pastor, too).
It's Good Friday, which seems to be a pretty difficult day for a lot of people. The fact that it's 80 degrees and sunny and spring break don't make it any easier.
I know, you're thinking, "What - they're not clamoring to fill the pews and hear about Jesus' trial and sentence to death, and then his gruesome dying on the cross?"
But today matters. I so wish that everyone who's planning to be here on Sunday morning would make it to worship tonight. Easter doesn't make sense without Good Friday. In fact, the "Great Three Days," or Triduum, began at sundown yesterday and end tomorrow night (when Easter begins), and they are all one service, liturgically speaking. There's no resurrection without the cross, without death, first. Hard, but true.

Lord Jesus Christ,
as we kneel at the foot of your cross,
help us to see and know your love for us,
so that we may place at your feet
all that we have and are.
Crucified savior, naked God,
you hang disgraced and powerless.
Grieving, we dare to hope,
as we wait at the cross
with your mother and your friend.

Thursday, March 20, 2008

The night of betrayal


Today is Maundy Thursday - when we remember how Jesus took the role of a servant and washed his disciples' feet, then gave them a new commandment (mandatum, hence "Maundy") to love one another. It's also when Jesus told his disciples to eat the bread- his body- and drink the cup - his blood of the new covenant- "in remembrance of me."
Here at SOV we've got a "Living Lord's Supper" tonight, thanks to our Liturgical Drama team. It's always interesting to see "regular" congregation members play the parts of Jesus and his disciples: Peter-the-denier, Judas-the-betrayer, etc..

After all, tonight is "the night in which he was betrayed." Even though I say or hear those words weekly during Holy Communion, I don't often stop to think about what they're saying. In the night in which Jesus was betrayed... He was betrayed, after all. And it was an inside job.