change

Everything Changes | an online Easter sermon for a socially distanced people

Easter Sunday comes, but we are all still in Good Friday or Holy Saturday—and, by the look of things, will be for quite sometime. Friday and Saturday of Holy Week (which is a mapping of the main movements in this journey of our lives) remind us of the reality of pain, suffering, death, and grief. Saturday symbolizes those long periods of our lives when we grope through the shadows searching for direction, a new beginning, anything to give us hope. Saturday characterizes our lives when we can’t see into the future.

At best, the COVID19 crisis has us in Saturday. More likely, we’re still in Friday—the day of death, grief, and loss.

Into our experience of all this, Easter comes.

We face Easter differently this year. Less naive. More realistic about the other two days that, for most of society, Christianity included, are too often overlooked. We like to go straight to Easter, so enamored are we by the light, the joy, and sense of excitement.

This sermon is sober. But it’s not sedate. In it, there’s a real sense of the Force of life that not only changes us, but “threatens” (in all the right ways, IMO) to change everything. COVID19 will change us. And there’s something else at work in the dark of this season, in this Friday/Saturday of our existence. Sunday is pulling us into a future that could make us a more benevolent presence on this planet.

Below, I explore the nature of Easter, the nature of the cosmic Christ, and the nature of our humanity—not dogmatically, but poetically and socially. History shows us that when crisis hits, it’s the poets and other artists who see the way forward before the politicians do . . .

Hang It Up: how men must change what they believe about God (women and children too)

A sermon exploring violence, masculinity, and religious belief, and a way we can break the pattern of bloodshed, tyranny, and harassment.  

Genesis 9.8-17 / Mark 1.9-15 First Sunday of Lent 2018

Today is the first Sunday of Lent—a weekend marred once again by a tragic shooting in an American school.  On a weekend like this, in the midst of a troubled world, our readings offer astonishing and timely wisdom.  

The text from Genesis is the conclusion to the story of the rise of violence, the Great Flood, and God’s rescue of Noah and the creatures.  And here at the end of the story, God makes a covenant with the Earth, never again to destroy life on the planet.  God says, “I have hung up my bow”.  God hung up his bow—the bow, a symbol of warfare and violence and killing.  “I have hung up my bow in the clouds,” said God, and whenever we see the rainbow in the clouds after a fearsome storm, we can remember the day God said, “never again shall I destroy what lives on the Earth.”