News vs Views

January 25, 2021

Next Sunday we will look at Mark’s first actions of Jesus after calling disciples.  Jesus goes to Capernaum, a small town on the north end of the Sea of Galilee, and teaches in the synagogue, the local church.  A man with a demon confronts him. Tune in Sunday to hear about it. This passage of scripture, though, will be preceded by the Old Testament reading of Deuteronomy 18:15-20:  “15The Lord your God will raise up for you a prophet like me from among your own people; you shall heed such a prophet.”  Moses, before turning over leadership to Joshua, promises the people that God will send prophets to lead them. A prophet was considered someone who spoke for God.  We often think it has to do with predicting the future but not necessarily. Prophets were considered to be in communication with God and speaking for him.  If what was said did not come true then the person could be killed.  Serious stuff!

         News broadcasts today take on a similar tone.  If we don’t change our lifestyle we are going to use up the world resources – global warming.  While not claiming divine inspiration, they do claim scientific authority and weave possibilities about what is to come.  We have also seen this in the reports about the pandemic, when it will peak, what is needed “to achieve herd immunity” and just how this disease is going to unfold in the near future.  Some keep close track of the stock market for financial predictions and those trends are broadcast daily.  Perhaps the horoscope is your thing, daily checking its predictions.  Fortune cookies are fun.  All these avenues seem to imply our desire to peek into the future and be assured we are on the right track, or at least prepared.

         Moses assures us that God will and does raise up people to speak for him.  God speaking today is foundational to many religions and key to Christianity.  Perhaps it is time to open our Bible and listen.  The text for Sunday is Mark 1:21-28.  Perhaps it is time to pray thanksgiving that we have God’s word in our language and readily accessible.  Perhaps you are feeling the challenge to memorize a piece of scripture to focus your thinking during these days of challenge.

         As we listen to all the voices speaking into our lives today about our future, may we never forget that the future lies in God’s hands and God walks with us.  May we agreed with King David in Psalm 119, “Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light for my path.”  Blessings as you listen.


Sunday – Epiphany

January 23, 2021

First Reading: Jonah 3:1-5, 10

1The word of the Lord came to Jonah a second time, saying, 2“Get up, go to Nineveh, that great city, and proclaim to it the message that I tell you.” 3So Jonah set out and went to Nineveh, according to the word of the Lord. Now Nineveh was an exceedingly large city, a three days’ walk across. 4Jonah began to go into the city, going a day’s walk. And he cried out, “Forty days more, and Nineveh shall be overthrown!” 5And the people of Nineveh believed God; they proclaimed a fast, and everyone, great and small, put on sackcloth.
  10When God saw what they did, how they turned from their evil ways, God changed his mind about the calamity that he had said he would bring upon them; and he did not do it.

Psalm: Psalm 62:5-12

5For God alone I wait in silence;
  truly, my hope is in God.
6God alone is my rock and my salvation,
  my stronghold, so that I shall never be shaken.
7In God is my deliverance and my honor;
  God is my strong rock and my refuge.
8Put your trust in God always, O people,
  pour out your hearts before the one who is our refuge. 
9Those of high degree are but a fleeting breath; those of low estate cannot be trusted.
  Placed on the scales together they weigh even less than a breath.
10Put no trust in extortion; in robbery take no empty pride;
  though wealth increase, set not your heart upon it.
11God has spoken once, twice have I heard it,
  that power belongs to God.
12Steadfast love belongs to you, O Lord,
  for you repay all according to their deeds. 

Second Reading: 1 Corinthians 7:29-31

29Brothers and sisters, the appointed time has grown short; from now on, let even those who have wives be as though they had none, 30and those who mourn as though they were not mourning, and those who rejoice as though they were not rejoicing, and those who buy as though they had no possessions, 31and those who deal with the world as though they had no dealings with it.  The present form of this world is passing away.

Gospel: Mark 1:14-20

14Now after John was arrested, Jesus came to Galilee, proclaiming the good news of God, 15and saying, “The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God has come near; repent, and believe in the good news.”

  16As Jesus passed along the Sea of Galilee, he saw Simon and his brother Andrew casting a net into the sea—for they were fishermen. 17And Jesus said to them, “Follow me and I will make you fish for people.” 18And immediately they left their nets and followed him. 19As he went a little farther, he saw James son of Zebedee and his brother John, who were in their boat mending the nets. 20Immediately he called them; and they left their father Zebedee in the boat with the hired men, and followed him.

Children’s SERMON

Our Old Testament lesson for today comes from the book of Jonah.

  1. Who was Jonah, a king or a prophet?    Jonah was prophet in the Northern Kingdom that is around the Sea of Galilee, the area where Jesus grew up. 
  2. What was Jonah’s message?    God sent Jonah to Nineveh, modern day Iraq, outside Mosul, with a call to repentance or else.
  3. Did Jonah obey?  No.  Jonah did not go north but went to the ocean and climbed on a boat to Tarsus, Paul’s hometown.  Does God give second chances today?
  4. God sent a storm and Jonah confessed it was his fault.  “Throw me overboard.”  God sent a fish that swallowed Jonah.  Jonah prayed and the fish spit Jonah up on the shore and then Jonah went to Nineveh and preached. 
  5. The people repented. God relented.  Jonah pouted.  Was Jonah happy?  NO.  God grew a vine that shaded Jonah as he pouted and Jonah was comforted.  God sent a worm that ate through the vine.  Jonah is now truly upset with God. 
  6. God shares his concern for the lost – people and animals whom he created.

Let us pray:  Lord may the words of my mouth and the thoughts of my heart be pleasing to you as we gather today.

SERMON

         Jonah is quite a story.  Usually we eat fish, fish don’t eat us. God gives Jonah a second chance.  Does God give second chances today? Seldom do we see revivals and people repenting and fearful of God’s wrath today.  Would God truly punish ignorant people and animals?  We preach the love of God, not judgment.  Worms that eat plants in a night are rare.  God changing his mind, relenting of his intention to punish, is contrary to our faith in a God who is the same yesterday, today and tomorrow.  Jonah challenges our concept of God.  Our reading today challenges us also.

         The Gospel of Mark is known as an action gospel.  He keeps the story rolling.  I was struck by the connecting time words.  “Now,” “immediately,” and “immediately” again.  Mark seems to be connecting “call” with stories that are uncomfortable to hear today and challenge our Santa Clause idea of God, ready to make our life work – “Try him, you’ll like it.”  As we see Jonah wrestle with God in the Old Testament reading, we will wrestle with God this morning.

         NOW.  John the Baptist, Jesus’ cousin, has a popular ministry leading masses of people to repentance and baptism.  Surely he is doing God’s will and deserving of God’s protection and blessing.  But what we hear today and is confirmed in other gospels is that John was arrested.  He was beheaded because of a drunken party to please a sexy young dancing stepdaughter.  UNFAIR!  The call to ministry is not a call to success and happiness and often is in the context of unjust social systems.  Half of the United States is excited about our new President and half is outraged.  Many want the vaccine but are going to have to wait and poor countries may not even be able to buy.  The West again has the money and resources.  For many this is a source of irritation.  Some people pray and receive a miracle and others pray and die.  Like Jonah, it is easy to affirm that we know God is compassionate and loving but we are also very angry when what we perceive is evil seems to be prospering.

         In the midst of the “now”, in the midst of political whims, Jesus returns to Galilee, his home area, and starts his public ministry.  Jesus picks up where John must let go.  Call is for faithfulness in the now and we do not need to hold ourselves responsible for the whole story.  Many of us know the grief of raising a child as best we know but then that child so beloved to us makes choices that hurt.  John the Baptist, from prison, sends his disciples to ask Jesus if Jesus is truly the promised Messiah.  Like John, we question ourselves.  Many of us enter jobs or marriages and as much as we want them to last forever, life changes and we must let go.  We must allow Jesus to step in and carry on.  We are called for now and here where we are.  Our candidate may not have won; our loved one may have succumbed to Covid but that does not mean God is inactive.

         Interestingly Jesus preaches that “”the time has come, the kingdom is near, repent and believe.  Ouch.  That is hard for our ears to hear today.  The word, “repent” brings visions of those other emotional ones, the leapers and jumpers, the old-time revivalist.  Amazingly, the Ninevites fasted, prayed and repented.  Call clarifies for us who we want to please and serve, self and world or God.  When I was a child I thought like a child but when God calls and I understand his will, am I willing to believe his way is best? Am I willing to call for repentance or offer forgiveness?  Am I willing to turn the other cheek?  Am I willing to share of my resources?  Call is not always easy and may end in prison and Call leads to a confrontation with our lifestyle and beliefs.  Lord, HELP!

IMMEDIATELY.  Jonah runs to the Mediterranean Sea to get away from God’s Call but Jesus goes to the sea, to the Sea of Galilee, his home territory, to start calling disciples.  Mark tells us about the call of Simon, who later becomes known as Peter, and his brother Andrew.  They were fishermen who Jesus calls to be “fishers of men.”  I do not think this necessarily means we are all called to be evangelists but Jesus calls us where we are and invites us to a broader understanding of our vocation – now.  Fishermen become fishers of men.  Nurses become healers of people, not just disease.  Teachers become mentors of students and not just imparters of knowledge.  Our vocation becomes an avenue to share the good news of the nearness of the kingdom.

         Perhaps it goes without needing to be said that immediately places a “now” on ministry.  If I wait until I think I am ready, I may never do anything.  If I wait until I think I am competent, I will be tempted to focus on my limitations.  Simon and Andrew were not theologically trained, but ordinary people like you and me.  Perhaps we are “retired” but that does not mean we cannot share good news.  Perhaps we are young but that does not mean we are incompetent.  Jesus called people where they were and broadened the intention of vocation.  “Immediately” calls us back to now and calls me to reflect if I am just doing tasks or am I allowing the Holy Spirit to call me to a broader perspective.  This “immediately” does not allow me to whine about being old, being poor, being uneducated, being isolated, or not being responsible.  I cannot look to the government or social security or the doctor to be responsible for my vision for life.  Jesus calls us now to “follow” him.

         Call is not to success but to faithfulness – now.  Call is not to task but to service – now.  The next “IMMEDIATELY” tells me I am called to awareness of a broader family, the family of the kingdom of God.  James and John left their nets with their father and followed Jesus “immediately.”  Ouch.  As a young –ger person headed to the mission field with my husband and the first grandchild, I remember hearing my parents share, “I know my daughter is called to be a missionary but I am not sure I am called to be a missionary parent!”  I now understand better the tension in this call.  Perhaps there were other brothers to help the father of James and John.  Perhaps the fishing business was prosperous and the father could hire other helpers.  We don’t know.  James and John did not wait for all the details to be worked out but trusted and followed. James and John moved from their nuclear family, biologically connected, to a broader definition of family, spiritually connected.  That is not an easy transition.

         Jonah did not want to go to Nineveh.  The stereotype of these people was horrible. In Kenya, one tribe would never give a daughter to another tribe because they… fill in the blank – eat fish, don’t circumcise their men, or whatever.  In Minneapolis there could be a Norwegian Lutheran church on one corner, a Swedish Lutheran on another and an English Lutheran on the third.  We know the challenge of crossing imaginary lines in the sand.  We have a new President since last Sunday and it will be a challenge for half the country to follow his call to unity.  Trust has been broken.  Because of our faith in Christ, we find ourselves in a similar challenge with people that we are uncomfortable with.  Oh my. God help us!

         In the New Testament reading for today, Paul reminds the Corinthians, “The present form of this world is passing away,” and so they are to hold onto relationships loosely.  Friends, spouses, children are gifts for a time but our trust must be with God, not with them.  I read once that “leave father and mother” is not a call to leave in the lurch, to leave unloved and uncared for but is a call to value God and to realize his love calls us to a bigger family.  The Jesus, who called, healed Peter’s mother-in-law of a fever when he visited.  The Jesus, who called, had time for the woman bleeding as he went to heal Jairus’ daughter.  The Jesus, who called, welcomed the little children, the blind, and the lepers.  He cared about people, families and our relationships.  He can care for our loved ones.  Call is a call to trust him with that which we hold close to our hearts – now.      Trust is not something that happens tomorrow, that is earned.  Trust is what we do when we cannot see how things will work out.  God relented of his anger with the Ninivites but that did not change Jonah’s need to preach.  James and John’s father may struggle with the family business but that did not stop their response.  The new President may not be the one we would have liked but that does not remove from us the responsibility to be Christians now nor does it erase God’s hand in the events.

         Call is not to success but to faithfulness – now.  Call is to a vision of service to others and not just to a list of tasks for the day.  Call is a step into an unknown future trusting God to work it out and trusting God to care for those we care for.  We do not know what tomorrow will bring but we know who is with us now and tomorrow.  The book of Jonah ends with God asking Jonah a question, “And should I not be concerned about Nineveh, that great city, in which there are more than a hundred and twenty thousand persons who do not know their right hand from their left, and also many animals?”  God is concerned about all parties in the election, all struggling with covid, and all the economic challenges…and the animals in the environment.  “He’s got the whole world is in His hands, you and me brother, you and me sister, and the itty, bitty babies.”  Amen!


Let Us Build a House

January 23, 2021

We started this week of prayer for unity based on John 15:1-17. First we looked at the first half of verse 16, “You did not choose me, but I chose you and appointed you to go and bear fruit – fruit that will last.”  We are chosen and loved, part of a worldwide community that is diverse and multi-talented.  Yup, tensions and disagreements come and we are called on to forgive and to advocate.  Abiding in “the vine” and dwelling in His word transforms our world and us.  Hospitality is a key characteristic of a community.  Are we the “frozen chosen” or is there life that oozes from our gathers to nurture those who come?

         Saturdays I like to offer a hymn to end the week.  My heart went back to not so long ago, Let Us Build a House Where Love Can Dwell by Marty Haugen, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W3Pb77ylz_Q.  It has been a full week with politics forefront and policies for the pandemic and global relations, the “house” the government desires to build in the United States.    They are rolling out their plan and getting their people in position.  As we come to the end of the week, let’s listen to this song and pray about the “house” we are building in our church, in our family, and with our friends.   We have been chosen to bear fruit, fruit of the Spirit but also the fruit that builds others.  That fruit does not save us but certainly it demonstrates what type of branch we are and how we cling to the vine.  Blessings as you grow where you are plante


Pruning

January 22, 2021

Today is Day 5 of The Week for Christian Unity started in 1908.  We look at John 15:1-15 this year to focus our ponderings.  So far we have pondered being chosen – God comes to us we do not work our way to God.  As we abide in that reality we see the chosen-ness in “the other” also.  We grow and hopefully grow with others.  Being with others always involves differences and so the need for forgiveness, foot washing.  Corporate prayer draws us together before our maker.  “The other” is a mirror for me of my strengths and my weaknesses.  When I hurt my friend, I reflect on who I am.  Prayer is for requests but it also opens the door for transparency about our need to reform – pruning. 

         “I am the true vine and my Father is the gardener.  He cut off every branch in me that bears no fruit, while every branch that does bear fruit he prunes so that it will be even more fruitful.”

Growth in unity is also growth and transformation within as well as without.  I am not much of a gardener but I do love to plant a couple tomatoes in my hedge each year.  I put the cage around them to protect them and then I have been taught to pinch off the little suckers that sprout in the joints.  Those are like rabbit trails the plant goes down but they sap the plants energy, bear little, and the plant lives in a tangled mess.  Staying balanced and not chasing rabbit trails is a big challenge.  As Moses comes to the end of his life he challenges the people to submit to God’s will as revealed in Scripture, in prayer, in fellowship.  Truth is not something we must climb to heaven to find or descend to the depths.  It lays before us life and death.  Transformation of ourselves to be “our better selves” is possible.

         Each year I ponder a spiritual discipline goal that will guide me in growth.  Last year I thought I would try to read the book of Proverbs every month – 31 chapters meant a chapter a day – and there would be some point of wisdom to chew on.  I did not meet my goal but it gave me direction.  Others start the day by grounding themselves in the Beatitudes, Matthew 5:1-12.  The blessings at the end of the struggles encourage.  We are at the beginning of a new year, a new presidency, and a new decade.  Let us be open to being pruned so that we might bear more fruit and be a blessing to others.


Prayer

January 21, 2021

Day 4 of the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity, a tradition started in 1908!  Today we ponder John 15:15, “I do not call you servants any longer… but I have called you friends.”  Friends talk to each other. 

         One of the notable themes of yesterday’s inauguration was the presence of religion.  Four past and to-be presidents went to church together before the event.  The family Bible was sworn on.  Pres. Bidden stopped for prayer in his speech for those affected by Covid.  The young poetess mentioned the role of faith.  The call for unity is a call for conversation and a realization of the enormity of the challenges facing us today. That is a call to prayer.

         Praying in my closet is one thing but corporate prayer, prayer with others, often becomes a leader saying the prayer and the people chiming in, “amen.”  Is it possible to pray wrong?  If we use human friendship as our model then it is possible to say words that hurt and confront.  Hopefully the tie of friendship allows for explanations and healing of these wounds.  In Romans 8: 26-27, Paul reminds us that the Holy Spirit helps us in our weakness,

         “We do not know what we ought to pray for, but the Spirit himself intercedes for us with groans that words cannot express.  And he who searches our hearts knows the mind of the Spirit, because the Spirit intercedes for the saints in accordance with God’s will.”

         The discipline of corporate prayer is needed today.  We can wait until Sunday and let the pastor say words that we agree on but we can also pray with a friend, a spouse, or a prayer partner.  Prayers can be for the outcome of policies we want but they can also be for wisdom for our leaders, even as Solomon requested.  Offer prayers for ears to hear each other as discussions about how to handle the challenges will seek consensus.  Prayers for humility and vision are needed.  Praying through a psalm or praying a hymn is a creative way to talk together.  The Holy Spirit interprets our prayers so we need not fear.  We will be blessed and those we pray for will be blessed also.  Thank you, Lord.


Foot Washing

January 20, 2021


“Love one another as I have loved you” (John 15:12b)

Day 3 in our week of prayer for Christian Unity, we ponder the role of forgiveness.  A large part of the gospel reports deal with that last week of Christ’s life.  The last supper that we remember in our communion traditions, must have deeply impressed the followers.  Jesus kneeling and washing the feet of Judas who would betray him, of Peter who would deny him, and of the others who would flee, this memory is boggling to our limited thinking.  Without forgiveness relationships shatter and society polarizes.  We know this.  Today we inaugurate a new President as we stand in a country deeply divided.  How will healing ever occur?

         Paul admonishes the Colossians in chapter 3: 12-14, “Therefore, as God’s chosen people holy and dearly loved, clothe yourselves with compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness, and patience.  Bear with each other and forgive whatever grievances you may have against one another.  Forgive as the Lord forgave you.  And over all these virtues put on love, which binds them all together in perfect unity.”  Today we will hear speeches about unity and pulling together to make our country better.  For many there will be the terrible temptation to retreat in bitterness and cynicism.  For others it will be a call of victory.

         I love Walter Wangaard’s discussion of forgiveness in his book As for Me and My House.  Forgiveness does not deny differences.  Forgiveness is not a promise to forget that which has scarred us.  Forgiveness is not acting our way into a new way of feeling.  Forgiveness comes as we look past ourselves to the cross where we see love lived out. Christ loved us while we are sinners and loved us knowing we will fall short but that love still washes our feet and walks with us, giving us the strength to heal.  As we watch all the ceremonies today and listen to all the commentators and hear all the theories of how life will unfold in the coming days, may we also keep our hearts on the cross and its deep reminder that the way forward comes with forgiveness and foot washing.


Abiding

January 19, 2021

In 1908 Paul Wattson proposed that January 18-25 be a week of prayer for Christian Unity, across all denominations.  Many in the Northern Hemisphere will be praying and meditating on the verses of this week and entering committed prayer.  John 15: 1-17 frames our meditations.

         Day 2 we focus on verse 4a of John 15,  “Abide in me as I abide in you.”  Mary, mother of Jesus, saw the events unfolding in her life in ways she did not fully understand. Luke tells us she “treasured all these things in her heart. (Luke 2:51)  Are we pondering and treasuring the unfolding of the events of this week in our heart and listening for God’s voice in them?  The news with constant reports of the fear of violence can draw our minds and hearts down.  But we have a choice about what we meditate on.

         When I was younger, due to political unfolding of systems in my life, our family was forced to move to Nairobi.  It was quick.  It was unsettling and I needed to ground myself.  A friend and I met weekly for memorization and prayer to ground ourselves in God’s truth.  Her goal was to memorize a prayer from Scripture to pray for her family.  I have not forgotten that advice.  During times of distress, I try to my ground thoughts and emotions in a time tested prayer.  Ephesians 3:14-19 is one of those prayers that I could ponder and theologians have written a book about.  Let’s meditate on it today.

         “For this reason, I kneel before the Father, from whom his whole family in heaven and on earth derive its name.  I pray that out of his glorious riches he ay strengthen you with power through his Spirit in your inner being, so that Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith. And I pray that you being rooted and established in love, may have   power together with all the saints, to grasp how wide and long and  high and deep is the love of Christ, and to know this love that  surpasses knowledge – that you may be filled to the measure of all the fullness of God.”

         Let us abide in these truths.  Our lives are under God’s control as much as our President’s.  God gives us strength and power, not just money, to deal with life’s challenges.  Christ dwells in our hearts – that close, not in Washington or far off realms.  Our roots draw strength and power from the love of God that is not measurable and not understandable.  It is a gift.  Our lives are in his hands.  Let’s let these truths sink into our hearts, a treasure that makes us rich!   Blessings as you pray.


Day 1

January 18, 2021

Christian Unity

In 1908 Paul Wattson proposed that January 18-25 be a week of prayer for Christian Unity, across all denominations.  Many in the Northern Hemisphere will be praying and meditating on the verses of this week and entering committed prayer.  Wow, this is a significant week for people in the United States with the inauguration of a new President and threats of violence across our country.  We join our voices in this week of prayer for Christian Unity.  We will join our hearts with the world wide Christian church to pray and reflect on designated verses.  The theme for this year comes from John 15: 1-17.  The theme, “Abide in my love and you shall bear much fruit” comes from verses 5-9. 

           Day 1, today, we look at John 15:16a, “You did not choose me but I chose you.”  For many that spiritual experience with the Divine when a person “accepts Jesus as their Savior” or when a person becomes deeply aware of their chosen-ness is a deep defining moment in their life.  Yesterday in church services we read and reflected on Jesus calling his first disciples.  Similarly, Father Abraham in Genesis 12:1-4 had a similar call experience when God appeared to him, “Go to the land I will show you.”

         Jesus called the disciples.  God called Abraham.  God calls us, just as we are.  We do not work our way to heaven but God comes to us.  We are chosen to be a blessing to all, to start a journey with God to new places in our lives that we may not anticipate but that he unveils and reveals.  This call is for everyone, not just the young.  Abraham was to be a blessing to all nations, not just his “peeps,” not just to those who agree with him, but to all the nations God created. 

         Today people in the USA and the media struggle with polarization, of choosing who is good, who is right, and who is wrong.  This theme is so strong right now.  Only God knows the hearts of people.  These two call scenarios show us that God calls us in our selfishness, shortsightedness, our incompleteness to be a blessing to all and he calls us to start a journey with him to places unknown to us now.  This week may we turn from violence and hatred and keep our eyes focused on a savior who died for all and who calls us to be a blessing.


Kingdom of God

January 16, 2021

“It is time!”  I love that line in Lion King when Rafiki, (the name means friend in Swahili), the wise monkey, tells Simba it is time to claim his kingdom.  Simba majestically starts to walk to Pride Rock, to stand silhouetted by the sun and to do a roar.  It is a beautiful picture of the stepping into identity and role Simba has prepared all his life for.  This week TV will broadcast the change of leadership for us as President elect Biden assumes a position he has worked for all his political career.   Many will feel that same sense of fulfillment, it is time.

         Mark introduces the start of Jesus’ public ministry with the words, “The time has come. The kingdom of God is near.”  Mark uses the words “kingdom of God” fifteen times in his Gospel as Jesus preaches and fleshes out what that means.  I thought of the famous Lord’s Prayer that so many know and was given to us as a model of prayer and which has as the second petition,  “they kingdom come.”  The Catechism defines this as God’s Kingdom of Grace, his Kingdom of Glory, but not yet his Kingdom of Power.  That is still coming with Christ’s return when he climbs Pride Rock and declares his complete reign over life.  What a moment that will be.

         Today is Saturday so let us sit back and focus our hearts in a musical rendition of the Lord’s Prayer by Andrea Bocelli: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tf1wtzOoXDA.  The Kingdom of God is near in the presence of Jesus Christ, in the closeness of the Holy Spirit, and experienced in word, sacrament, prayer and fellowship.  Lord, may we keep our eyes on you as we go through this week.


Good News

January 15, 2021

What good news would you like to hear today?  I’m taking my car in for a check up and I would love to hear the bill fits my budget!  I would love to turn on the radio and hear some words of reconciliation on our political scene.  It would be nice if the statistics on illness and death would improve.  Oh, for a phone call from one of my children.  There are so many messages of “good news” we could hear today.  When Jesus’ cousin, John the Baptist, was put in prison, Jesus traveled back to home territory, “Galilee, proclaiming the good news of God, ‘The time has come,’ he said, ‘the kingdom of God is near. Repent and believe the good news.’”

         “The time has come.”  That sounds like our news stations counting down to next Wednesday and the inauguration.  Events are unfolding and probably change is on the horizon.  I’m not sure we would call it the “kingdom of God” but certainly we are approaching an event.

         The time has come for serious preparation for the event.  Soldiers are securing the parade route and the capital.  The wedding dress is bought and hanging on the door.  The food is ordered for the celebration party afterwards.  Invitations have been sent.  Anticipation is high.  The coming of the kingdom of God is not dissimilar. 

         Jesus preached, “the time has come” for the unveiling of the kingdom of God.  How are we preparing?  Are we checking out news reports – reading Scripture?  Are we encouraging our friends to “tune in” to unfolding events and prepare?  Are we in prayer, responding to the invitation?  I note that Jesus goes on to tell people to repent and believe.

         Today we do have “good news.”  No matter who becomes President of the US, God is still reigning over life.  No matter what evil threatens our lives, our souls are in the hands of God.  No matter what fears plague our thinking, Jesus offers the “peace that passes understanding.”  We have much “good news” we can focus on and ground our lives in today in the midst of the chaos and turmoil of our world. May we think on those words as we go about our day.  “The time has come! The kingdom of God is near!”  Blessings.